I destroyed the surface of the Earth, allegorically and
instantaneously, ( I could not stand
anything else) in order to create my own paradise.
I put
the protoplasts in it; I put the tree of knowledge; but Fear, I left out.
…And
there was god!
25 century
Chapter
1
Part 1
The
PRESIDENT and founder of the research had only one passion, technology.
Fifty-two scientists worked for him and they shared three things in common.
They were top in their fields, they had passion with their work and they had no
families, so they could be undistracted in their investigation. It was not just
a research Center; it was a shelter too, huge and equipped with supplies and
materials; in case of war, it could support them for a decade. They called it
Oneiroupolis, (Dreamtown) because it was the ideal place for every researcher
to pursue even his or her wildest vision, uninhibited from the reactions of
society.
The President also funded the
research in the field of the accelerators. He made friends that he took “care” of and made them promise that,
one week before the first experiment, they would let him know so that he, too,
could be present in this great moment. So he told them, but the truth was
different.
The President
asked his people at Oneiroupolis whether the accelerator experiments were
dangerous. He got a negative answer and some ironic glances. But he was
not appeased. Although a person with no limits or barriers, he though that this
was not so with nature. What would happen to the accelerator in case of a mistake?
The President feared it would be something bad.
Survival in the Center came in two scenarios
ONEIROUPOLIS
1: In this case the war was predicted to be short. Scientists and auxiliary
personnel would remain and the President would have guests, personalities who later,
would repay this hospitality in many ways.
ONEIROUPOLIS 2: Long-term war. Only the scientists, allotted also all functional works of the Center, would remain. The President would have no guests, since he did not care for anybody that much as wanting to save them. Together with the security foreman and the three armed bodyguards, there would remain 57 persons, among whom 12 women.
Each year, the
President ordered DRILL: Oneiroupolis 2 and the Center went out of its steady
beat. When he came to inspect, he always found something to correct and the
person responsible of the omission or the mistake did not have time either to
rectify or to repeat the mistake. He or she would leave at once.
It was around noon in his group of companies which secured funds for Oneiroupolis, when he received a phone call from the director of the accelerator center announcing that on Thursday, the day before Christmas, at 10.00, the first experiment was to take place. The President said “thanks, I’ll try to be there”, hang up the receiver and took a deep breath. He nodded at the bodyguard, who was the best driver of his helicopter, to get it ready and then called the security foreman at the Center.
- ONEIROUPOLIS 2,
he said.
- You said
ONEIROUPOLIS 2, sir?
- Exactly.
- Sorry to insist, but is it not DRILL: ONEIROUPOLIS 2?
- No.
They remained silent for some seconds and the President hung up the
receiver. He called his secretary, informed her that he was to leave and told
her to transfer all his appointments after the holidays. He made his way to the
elevator accompanied by his two bodyguards without casting a glance at the
personnel working. They arrived at the Base almost before the fresh supplies
and materials came in. This surprised the scientists, since he always gave them
12 hours’ start before making his appearance.
Until Monday, when he made his inspection, he hadn’t lost his temper
once. Even when the sound of a fly disrupted the deadly silence in the kitchen,
the President looked at the responsible veterinarian and did not say “you are
fired’ but “fix it”. Everybody was pleasantly surprised with the President and
thought he had become more human, except for the security foreman who
understood there was no time for replacements.
On Wednesday morning he synchronized Oneiroupolis time with
that of the accelerators center and asked if everything proceeded according to
schedule. He told them he would try to come and went for a ride in town. Before
they stepped into the limo to return, a gamin run to them trying to sell his
merchandise. He looked at all of them and stopped in front of the President.
His eyes betrayed his cleverness and his bones his hunger. Someone said that,
if you save a human being you save humanity. With this, so rare for him,
romantic thought, the President made a nod and the boy was hauled into the car.
-What is your name? He asked the boy when they took off.
- P.U., and tell this muscle to take his hands off me or… I will
spit him
The President laughed and wondered how long it was since the last
time he had a real laugh.
-What does P.U. stand for?
-Whatever suits
me! Hey, don’t tell me you are some kind of perverts and….
- Oh no, don’t worry. Perverts go with perverts and it is obvious
that you are a man.
-You bet…. glowed the boy and made himself more comfortable.
It was a good thing he had taken the boy with him; everybody has a
faithful pet. He would have P.U.
They entered the concrete-reinforced garage and the door closed
behind them. They left the luxurious car, climbed into the mini-bus and made
their way to the elevator platform.
After a few meters of descent, there was a soft sound and it became darker. P.U. looked up from the window and saw a partition isolating them from the surface. Five more times there came the same sound and P.U. asked “but, where are we going?”
After a few meters of descent, there was a soft sound and it became darker. P.U. looked up from the window and saw a partition isolating them from the surface. Five more times there came the same sound and P.U. asked “but, where are we going?”
- You shall see… said the President.
And so he did. The prettiest woman he had ever seen, 25-year-old
Psychologist, slightly built Miss Mary... The 12-year old boy
fell instantly in love with her and vowed in his mind to marry her.
Oneiroupolis was sealed that night. The President stepped into the
“capsule”, took pills and fell into a deep sleep. He was awakened at 10.05 in
the morning by the Environmentalist who told him that a few minutes ago the
instruments had detected radiation and high thermal activity. Since that
moment, they had no contact, no information from the world overhead.
- How long did it last?
- Only some
hundredths of a second. [1]
- And
Oneiroupolis?
- Everything functions perfectly, said the security foreman.
- That’s good;
he answered and turned the intercom off.
P.U. grew up to be a handsome youth. He
ate like a wolf but his bones still showed because he was all dash and nerve.
He was the only cheerful person in there because he had a place to stay, lots
of food, the President’s protection and sympathy, a lot of friends - and Mary!
He was the boy for every job; he helped whoever asked him, receiving
knowledge in return. He learned about plants, mathematics and physics, anatomy
and pathology, he made experiments in the chemistry lab, he cooked for
everybody and came to be the fastest on the computer. And, before dropping into
a sleep resembling death, he studied history and art.
Mary came to worry about his mental health and, in one of their
weekly five-minute interviews; she asked him why he did all this.
- I like learning
new things; he answered, and guiltily looked away from her Spanish eyes,
because he was not telling her the whole truth. He was 13 years younger than
her, 20 than the youngest man. Some day, he might inherit humanity and its
culture. He had to become worthy of it.
He woke up with his left arm aching. The ice-cold water bottle
touched his shoulder while he was asleep and now the muscles were giving him an
acute pain. He thought he’d ask the General physician-apothecary for a muscle
relaxant shot and, since he’d be going that way, to return the book about the
life of Alexander the Great. In the library there was Konstantin, the Russian
biologist and U.P. felt a little nervous at his sight because Konstantin
was very serious, about 45, respected even by the President and with no
secondary duties. Mary did not interview him; on the contrary, it was she that
confided in him her fears and nightmares because she felt that Konstantin was
the impersonation of kindness, serenity and wisdom.
DIALOG
1. BREATHING
- What are you reading? P.U asked
- Pythagoras, said Konstantin, with a voice you had to be
careful to hear. You?
- The life of Alexander the Great, answered P.U little triumphantly.
- It’s clear you are thrilled about it; what did you like the
most?
- Mmm…. The fact that he was
daring and undefeatable!
With an imaginary sword, P.U distributed sword strikes around,
killed invisible enemies and threw down some chairs, to Konstantin’s amusement.
At the best of his performance he moaned and stood still.
- What’s the matter?
- My arm is aching, the muscles are cramped…. I hate
shots but now I’ll have to…
- Come here; we may be able to avoid that.
P.U. sat next to the biologist and looked at him with interest.
- Do you know what mouth to mouth resuscitation is?
-Sure, we open up the mouth of someone who’s fainted and we breathe
air in.
- What kind of air?
-We breathe in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide
-Does it not impress you? Why does a person live by breathing oxygen
but recovers with carbon dioxide?
-Well, now that you mention it, it does impress me. Why is that so?
Asked P.U and his eyes glowed.
- I’ll tell you. Has it ever happened to you to take deep breaths
and get dizzy?
-Mmm, yes, said the boy and blushed. At Miss Mary’s birthday I was
blowing up balloons and got a little dizzy.
-OK! Now tell me, what is oxidation?
-Rusting of metals.
-And which gas is responsible for that?
-Oxygen!
-So? What do you make of all this?
P.U looked at him pensively.
-If oxygen is bad for metals, it should be worse for man, for every
living thing… I find this hard and unfair… that we should live in an
environment that kills us… and, after all, how did life develop in a hostile
environment?
-That’s a reasonable thing to ask. But could it be that
the environment, the atmosphere, were not like this when life appeared?
P.U made his way to the encyclopedia shelves. He delved into the
books for quite some time and came back smiling.
- It was not like today. Judging from the composition of rocks found
in Swaziland,
dating 3, 5 billion years, it appears and the atmosphere was very poor in
oxygen but rich in carbon dioxide. Life appeared under different conditions
than today. I know that plants were the first to appear, so large quantities of
carbon dioxide were not hostile but the perfect environment for them.
- Exactly. Consuming carbon dioxide, the plants released oxygen,
thus changing atmospheric composition. We ended up having so little CO2 and so
much oxygen, leading to oxidation and sickness. Have you ever wondered what
sickness is?
-Hmmm! It’s a condition in which our organism doesn’t function
right.
- And why does it not function right? Why is your arm not
functioning as it should be?
- Because I was foolish enough to let ice-cold water in contact
with it and I got muscle soreness.
Konstantin smiled.
- If we substitute the word “foolish”, what would you say you did?
- Say…. I made a mistake.
- So, what does this make sickness?
- A mistake! We make mistakes and get sick.
- And what if we don’t make mistakes?
- If we don’t make mistakes, we don’t get sick.
- Right so! Said Konstantin emphatically.
P.U looked up, astonished.
- So, if we did no mistakes, we wouldn’t get sick… ever?
- It follows, doesn’t it?
-Then how
would we die? Being healthy?
- Is death obligatory?
P.U looked at him dumfounded. He held his breath while what the
biologist had said sank in.
- What do
you mean? He muttered. We might not die? Remain immortal?
- Probably, but how can we know if we make mistakes and get sick!
- But, has there never been a healthy human being?
- Has there ever been a piece of iron that remained rust free?
- Ah! So can’t we do
anything about it?
- We can. We can
control our breath. Take good notice, in
order for the blood to be able to circulate in our organism, to reach all
capillary vases, these but be open. Carbon dioxide is an insoluble gas; when
it’s there in the right proportion, it keeps vases open and blood can
circulate. Deep breaths expel carbon dioxide, so vases are restricted and we
faint. That’s why you felt dizzy when blowing up the balloons. Let’s make an
experiment. After exhaling, a healthy person can resist for a minute
before inhaling again. Let’s see how long you can resist.
- You mean, I inhale, exhale and then try to not take a breath
again until I…. burst?
-Exactly
P.U. took a deep breath but the biologist stopped him.
- Not a deep breath. You will inhale and exhale normally and you
will use only your nose; you won’t take air through your mouth.
- Ok, I got it, said the boy cheerfully and looked at the clock on
the opposite wall.
When the seconds hand reached 12 he clenched his nose. Before long
his body twitched for lack of oxygen; he unclenched his nose and took a deep
breath. He looked at Konstantin a little disillusioned.
- Very well. 42 seconds.
- But you said that a healthy person can hold the breath for a
minute.
- Don’t worry, you’ll get better. Now try to repeat what you did
before and, after the deep breath you will inhale and exhale normally four more
times so breathing gets back to its normal rhythm. Then, you do the “pause”
again. I want you to repeat the whole process of breathing in, breathing out
and “pause” five times. You will close your eyes and concentrate in what you
do; only at the fifth “pause” you can check the seconds and see if you got
better. Now show me where it is that you feel pain.
- P.U. touched his arm to show the exact point.
- It’s here that the pain is concentrated.
- Good, I will be touching here and you concentrate yourself in the
process. OK, if you are ready, off you go.
P.U. Made himself more
comfortable on his chair closed his eyes and concentrated himself. When he
clenched his nose, the biologists touched his arm at the point he’d indicated.
At the fifth “pause” P.U. opened his eyes and looked at the clock.
- 48 seconds, he announced out of breath. I got better but now I
want to pee.
He went to the man’s room and when he stepped out he stood by the
door. He moved his arm inquisitively and looked puzzled at Konstantin.
- The pain is gone.
- Good! You won’t have to have the shot.
- But… what was it? While you were touching me, I felt my arm hot, a
burning sensation!
- That was a short version of Buteyko’s method [2], the first step towards healthiness, replied the scientist smiling.
U.P. took some steps pensively and then looked at the older man.
- The short version you said…. So what’s the full version like?
- Shallow breathing, that is taking shallow breaths for twenty
minutes or more; don’t forget that every deep inhaling of oxygen oxidizes you.
In the first ten minute span you‘ll have to take some deep breaths as well, but
then you’ll realize that you can do fine with these shallow ones.
- And that’s the first step. Are there many more?
- The road is long… if you care to learn.
-I want to learn, said the boy with intensity. He sat
on his chair and grasped his head nervously. I feel strange, as if I were to
discover the world, as if I were born just now...
- Then you should choose your name, said Konstantin gently. If you feel
newly born, you have the right to choose a name for yourself.
U.P. took the
biologist’s glass of water and tipped it ceremoniously upon his head.
- In the name
of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, I name myself Alexander.
- Well, Alexander,
what you just did is significant.
- That I named
myself Alexander? He asked, rearranging his wet hair.
- Baptizing
yourself with water.
- Why?
- Water has the property to hold information [3]. Let’s say
we have a group of persons in a room, and they talk insensibly. And one more
group of persons, in another room, have a logical conversation. In both rooms
there is a bucket of water. If we freeze both buckets, the ice of the first
group is irregular while the ice of the second one is uniform.
-You don’t
say! said the boy impressed. He was looking right at Konstantin’s eyes and his
brain was working. Can water hold a prayer too, as information?
-Bravo Alexander! Said the man gratified. Indeed, water can hold prayer, too, as information.
- We had a logical conversation, the water in your glass got the
information and I threw it on myself. Water in a church also takes the
information of prayer and becomes holy water. So when someone drinks it or sprinkles
it on oneself, one gets the information, in other words the prayer itself.
-That’s right. Now think that our body is by 80% water. How positive thinking is healing! That’s enough, though, let’s stop
here; we said so many things and it is better that you thought them over and
let them “sink in”.
- Konstantin, that was the best conversation I had in my whole life;
can we talk again tomorrow?
- We’ll talk…
- Can we talk every day?
Konstantin saw the boy’s thirst to learn in his eyes ….
- We can…. We’ll talk about a model that contains everything, every
topic humans wonder about; sometimes we will give a solution, documenting it,
and sometimes we’ll express an opinion, an opinion we can hold as long as it
seems logical.
- But, Konstantin, how do you know all these things? How do you know
it is so?
- How did Democritus know about the atom? How did he end up knowing
that something he could not see existed? The road is one, Alexander,
imagination and logic. Imagination is necessary for a question to be set and
logic for the answer to be given. A Philosopher arrives to a conclusion and two
thousand years later, science comes to prove that he was right.
DIALOG
2. BEING, ROLES
The next afternoon, Alexander walked into the library and sat on the
same chair. In a while Konstantin appeared, smiled and sat down facing him.
Alexander noticed the man’s clothes, realizing that for three years now, since
he first met him, he wore the same attire, his medical apron and a black
flannel pair of pants. Temperature in Oneiroupolis was steady at 15 grades
Celsius and Konstantin surely wore lighter clothes than anybody else.
- Konstantin, I’ve noticed you dress lighter than anybody else in
Oneiroupolis. Don’t you feel cold?
- No…. Alexander, have you noticed whether animals get colds?
The youth lowered his eyes on the table thinking about Konstantin’s
question.
- No, I don’t know of any animal getting a cold. Maybe they are
cold, but this mustn’t be so annoying for them as to make them sick. It is as
if they are not cold. Why is that so? Why do humans get a cold while animals do
not?
- Let’s consider a human and a dog. When a cub ceases to be a cub,
can it survive by itself?
- Yes
- So the dog, from the moment it ceases to be a cub, “is” a dog; it
is the expression of a complete program which can function perfectly and
doesn’t need to get better. Now let’s consider a human. Does a child, from the
moment it ceases to be a child become a human? Say, can it survive by itself?
- It can. I have been alone most of the time since I was 6.
- How did you manage to survive?
- It wasn’t
easy. I learned to protect myself and avoid tricky businesses. I understood
there were times to remain invisible and times to vindicate things.
-You “understood”!
This is what distinguished you from other boys your age
so you survived; you understood more than they did. So here we have a boy
beginning to understand on
his way to becoming a Human being. But who is a Human being? What is a Human? It’s the spiritual entity that loves and cares about humanity and the
planet. Civilization is not knowledge and technology. Civilization is to be
good, useful and kind to fellow human beings. So every child that ceases to be
a child should become such a Human being. Were people around you such human
beings?
- Are you kidding? I was abandoned by my own parents. What do you think P.U. means?
Parents Unknown.
He spoke with such anger and disgust that Konstantin instinctively
moved away from him. They remained
silent for a while, then Konstantin leaned towards the youth again.
- Do you want us to discuss it?
-No, no! Konstantin, please go on with your discussion, just keep in
mind that the people I knew were not Human with a capital H.
-So, here we have a difference. The dog, once it ceases to be a cub,
“is” a dog. The child must become a Human, but iτ becomes a human with a small h instead, it’s like
the child remains in a constant adolescence. An animal “is”, a human must
“become”. Do you understand the difference?
-I understand it….
-So man simply doesn’t understand and, although he doesn’t have the
necessary logic, he does not draw an example from the animal which “is”, which
functions by the instinct nature gave it. Why doesn’t an animal be cold?
Because it has mechanisms to cope with cold. Why does man get cold, Alexander? [4]
-Is it because he wears clothes? Asked Alexander startled.
-How can the fighting mechanism get activated if he wears clothes?
Alexander, if clothes were necessary for his survival, he would have been born
with them. He wasn’t born with clothes, but with a mechanism that makes him
cope with weather conditions.
Alexander took off the jacket he was wearing over his T-shirt.
-What should I do?
-You will throw cold water on your body, several times a day.
Alexander remained silent for
a while.
-But, Konstantin, if the animal is a complete program and does not
need to get better, how have we arrived at the Human being? How is the man the
evolution of an animal which does not evolve?
-What do you think?
-I think that Man is not the evolution of an animal, that he is
something else, separate, different, doing different things than animals
-For example?
-Man can create a skyscraper…
-Have you ever seen a bird’s nest? Do you think they need anything
else?
-I understand, animals do and have exactly what they need… Animals
“are”
He stayed pensive for a while.
-Humans think while animals don’t.
- What’s the use of thinking when doing the right thing comes by
instinct? An animal has all the thought it needs
- That’s right; we already said an animal “is” complete. In what
does a human differ from an animal, Konstantin?
- In the pursued issue.
- Meaning?
- The pursue for a man is not to die, for an animal it is to find
food.
- Ah! This seems right, I like it….
- Be careful, though. An animal becomes food for another animal. It
can be eaten at any time or it might suddenly die. Man, too, while not being in
the food chain, could personally become food, say, to a bigger animal, or might
also come to a sudden death. The issue for him is to determine his death. If he
cannot control the area so that nothing bad happens to him, if he cannot
personally control the time of his death, in other words if he is not
successful in making his pursue come true, then he does not differ from the
animal. And, since at any moment he might probably die, he is a living dead.
And since he dies while wanting to live, he does not die but he is killed….
Alexander shuddered at the thought that a big animal might grasp him
just out of the blue.
- Controlling its own death is not the issue for an animal?
- No, there is no sheep nervous with the thought of death. It does
not imagine death. It smells the wolf and its instinct tells it to run away and
save itself, but death does not preoccupy it.
- How can we tell that this is so?
- If death did preoccupy a sheep, it would have tried to exit from
the food chain!
- Ah! Right…. Controlling death is the pursue for a man and that’s the difference
between him and an animal…. Yes. It seems logical, right…. But, Konstantin,
animals have developed! Scientists have seen this fact, it is clear from their
skeletons… If they are
complete, why did they develop?
-All animals are one animal [5] under different form; they express a role, the role of the animal.
All plants, too, are one and they also have their role. Man has a specific
role, too.
-I don’t grasp it.
-Pay attention, Alexander, this is important. There is nothing useless in nature. Whatever appears is useful in
something, it does something, it has a role. The same thing cannot have two
roles, since this would confound it; say, it would not know what to do first.
Do you accept this?
-Yes, it seems logical.
-Everything around us is a frequency, it transmits a frequency;
colors, sounds, rocks, you, everything are frequencies. Now what does a frequency do? Take for example television. The TV
antenna receives a frequency, decodes it so that it’s transformed in image and
sound. This frequency carries, has, thousands of pieces of information. So a
frequency carries information. Do you understand that?
-Yes…
-When we observe something, a result, it is logical for us to think
that something brought it about, that there must be a mechanism which enters
into action so that this “something” occurs. For example, we notice high tide;
this is the result of a Law, in other words we have the Law first and then the
result. Understandable?
-Yes…
-Every Law, every Rule, is a frequency transporting information
everywhere. Life is the result of a Law which expresses itself in a frequency
and this frequency exists in all Universe. When it slows down somewhere, on a
mountain of a planet, and encounters stable environmental conditions, proper
conditions as magnetism, humidity, temperature, the information is decoded as
it happens with the antenna, and life appears. Pay attention, Alexander. Life
appeared, first came the plants and then, to clear plants up by eating them, there came animals. So we have the activation of the Law of Life and the appearance of
the Plant. The need of the Plant triggered the role and the appearance of the
Animal. Then some other need triggered the appearance of Man. What was that need? What is the role of Man? To speak
more generically, what does Intellect do in the Universe?
Alexander, the Universe abounds with various frequencies. Some of
them are beneficial for the cell and some are not, it cannot bear them. High
frequency radiation of some billion Hz, due to the huge energy they transport,
can break-up the DNA of the cells and cause cancers. They are disastrous for life.
Carbon in the
atmosphere, as a crystal, can reflect this dangerous cosmic radiation. However
it began to wane, consequently there was need of someone who could filtrate
cosmic radiation; there was need, so to speak, of someone to protect the
planet…. Imagine now, particles of the dangerous radiation have a size A. What
do you think could inhibit them, block them? Bigger particles or smaller ones?
- Mmm! Bigger ones…
- No, smaller particles are needed; bigger particles they can pass
between, smaller inhibit them. Some researchers have said that the particle of
thought is as small as 10 to the -43. They did not encounter it in the lab
since they couldn’t build a machine to detect something so tiny; they arrived
at it by mathematics.
So wherever
life appears but there is not enough carbon or some other element to protect
the planet from cosmic radiation, creatures with the capability to think
appear. That’s how we arrive at the appearance of Man.
Those Men were
Spheres of Intellect; spheres because this is the most energy-saving form; they
wrapped the planet with the frequencies they emitted, creating a protective
umbrella and covering it from dangerous radiation. Plants, however, continued
consuming CO2; conditions changed and the spheres gradually changed too,
materializing, taking forms and then bodies. Continuous reduction of carbon
dioxide made the existence of more Men necessary. Instead of more Spheres
coming down, it was more economic for the spheres to change.
In order to
survive, every system needs a mechanism of defense. That’s how some Humans underwent a small hormone transformation, changed
and women appeared. Women came in intercourse with Men, so boys and girls were
born. We have two different roles. The role of the woman as defensive mechanism
is to give birth to children, and the role of man is to do what he did when he
was in the condition of Sphere, to protect the planet by thinking. Based on this distinction, Alexander, when we’ll refer to “men” in our
conversations, we’ll actually mean men and not generally humans; whenever we’ll refer to women, we’ll specify
it. So, by arriving at simple conclusions, we make a protective umbrella. You have to think in order to get an apple. Nature gets the thought
and you get the apple.
Let’s
summarize then.
In the
Universe there are Laws.
One such Law
is the Law of Life.
The
information of Life, as a frequency, expresses itself when found in the proper
environment, and life appears.
Appearing
forms of Life acquire a role.
Konstantin
remained silent, giving Alexander time to think
-Did you get
that?
-Yes, but…
-You need time
to digest it! So let’s take a break.
Alexander went
into the plant area and sat under the olive tree. It was something he often did
when he wanted to be by himself. He liked Konstantin’s story. The existence of
Life in the Universe was accepted as an idea by the whole scientific community
and, independently of what they said, he could not imagine a Universe
containing life and not being alive, consequently life must be a condition,
must be a law…. Yes, Konstantin’s image, the Laws, the Roles, satisfied him
more. He thought he might have found the person who’d answer satisfactorily the
question he felt needed an answer more than anything else.
DIALOG 3. GOD, CREATION OF THE WORLD
-Konstantin,
does God exist?
-But you baptized
yourself in the name of the Holy Trinity.
-I wanted to
confer solemnity, I didn’t know what to say... I don’t know whether God exists
or not, I don’t know what to believe….
-Then you need
to understand whether he exists or not .
-Ah! Yes
Konstantin, you said the right word, I want to understand, believing or not has
no… sense; faith falters but, if I’m able to understand, I won’t wonder again!
Konstantin, society may make thousands of mistakes, but children are not to
blame, so shy doesn’t God help at least children, why should children have
cancer? This confounds people preventing them from accepting the idea of God…
“Since God doesn’t help children, God does not exist”, they say…
-Alexander,
after the question “is there God”, we must wonder “what is God like?”
-Indeed
-If we give an
answer that satisfies us logically, then shall we accept that God exists?
-I don’t see
how it can satisfy us logically! We were told that god is omnipotent,
omniscient, and so on and so forth, but this does not satisfy me… logically!
Why should I accept it, maybe take your word for it? First you should prove to me that God exists!
-The answer
that might satisfy you, could maybe have to do with the question “what is God”?
-What God is…
Yes, this approach is different, it satisfies me more, completely I could say!
What is God, Konstantin?
- Now pay attention Alexander. Energy does not
disappear. Man, as an observer, observes around him the existence of motion,
light and warmth, which is energy expressing itself as motion, light and
warmth. It’s logical to say that these are a result, and somewhere else there
must be energy expressing itself in lack of motion, darkness and cold. What
energy has the properties of lack of motion? That, on which equal and opposite
forces are exercised.
Konstantin took a white sheet
of paper, a pencil and an eraser; made a gesture and showed
it to Alexander.
-Yes, I get
that.
-However,
there is a possibility that parts of this motion escapes, so that we have a
clockwise or anticlockwise spin free.
-Yes….
-Imagine many
spins, turning to right or left, some of them attracting each other and forming
particles. In other words we have the appearance of matter.
-Ah!
-Electric
current is the motion of particles. People ignite fire by rubbing together two
pieces of wood; it is the motion of particles. So, if motion is warmth what is immobility?
-Cold?
-Immobility
practically means absence of particles. What is absence of particles?
-The vacuum?
-Let’s say we have an empty utensil. It looks
empty, but there are particles moving in it. Say, a hundred particles. We can
take away 80 of them, so 20 remain… But when we arrive at one particle, which
is the absolute vacuum, absolute immobility and absolute cold, at -273 Celsius
grades, we have the appearance of particles, a spontaneous appearance of
sub-matter.
-Oh! You mean
matter appears from nowhere, from nothing; in other words nothing doesn’t
exist, there will always appear something…
-That’s right,
Alexander, what people perceive as Nothing is Everything, is the Cold… Be careful now. We have the appearance of sub-matter. Two
particles tend to unite or ran away from each other; what brings stability is
the third one. Those 3 particles will be the closest to each other, and not the
most remote. We have the appearance of two Laws. The Law of Attraction and the
Law of Economy. The appearance of matter has triggered the appearance of Laws
and Rules by which matter functions. A system was created, a chain of actions
that had the capability to realize and resolve problems,
-But this is
like an algorithm!
-Exactly. This
algorithm is God…
The shocked
look on the youth’s face made Konstantin stop short.
-I never imagined god as an old man with a white beard up on the clouds; my imagination went towards something airy, immaterial, that could all the same “see” and help children. Nothing as impersonal as this… God is an algorithm!? He repeated the phrase in a whisper, as if trying it out.
-I never imagined god as an old man with a white beard up on the clouds; my imagination went towards something airy, immaterial, that could all the same “see” and help children. Nothing as impersonal as this… God is an algorithm!? He repeated the phrase in a whisper, as if trying it out.
-God helps him
who shall ask, not for himself but for others, and the help is expressed in
difficulties. It is not enough that he be innocent, harmless. He must have done
good. In the same way that a baby cannot imagine orgies, God cannot “see”
anything different from Him. He cannot “see” children. Pay attention. Alexander,
each Law is expressed in frequencies. There are thousands of Laws; every
logical conclusion of man is subject to some Law. All these frequencies have,
let’s say, a resultant, one Law. God is the Law of Laws.
Alexander
stood silent for a while.
-You mean
that, from the Cold, matter was created and matter organized itself giving rise
to God…. Does this mean Cold is the father of God?
- Yes, you
could put it like this. The space of God, Harmony, compared with Cold is, so to
say, a drop in the ocean. When a move escapes, it has infinite speed and zero
mass. As long as it slows down, something is created. These subatomic particles
from the Cold are in chaotic motion; they enter Chaos if we care to put it so, existing
there for some time. When they acquire enough mass, they are organized in
Harmony. Like a comet that used to wander in a chaotic motion and then was
organized, captured in a steady course.
- I don’t like
the idea of God-algorithm, but it has logic. Say, about comets, I could not
understand how God allowed that a comet fell wiping out most of the life in the
dinosaurs’ era. Now I understand that he could not control it, that it was not
yet in His area, in Harmony as you call it. And why He doesn’t help children,
because He cannot see…. I must rethink everything with this model…. How
everything bonds together. It satisfies my logic but not my emotions.
He remained
silent for a while and then smiled.
-God is the
Law of Laws, this I liked best.
Konstantin
smiled but said nothing. He gave the boy time to recover from the shock and
assimilate things.
He suddenly
burst out laughing.
- I remember a
phrase of our Keeper. “If man is the image and similitude of God, then God must
be a drinker and a gambler…”
Alexander leaned on the back of the chair and stretched himself.
Alexander leaned on the back of the chair and stretched himself.
-So,
Konstantin, shall we go on with the next question, about the soul? These two
make a pair: “does God exist?” “does the soul exist?”
-Don’t you
want us to take a break?
-No! I want to
understand.
DIALOG 4. SOUL,
JESUS
-What is the
soul?
-What is the
software in a computer?
-The software? Asked Alexander startled. It is an
integrated and independent ensemble of commands that is used for the execution
of a specific work… He repeated the phrase slowly in a whisper. That must be the soul! He said triumphantly.
I
like it, I understand it! How does the soul enter the body?
-The soul, the
“software” of the soul, is a Law existing everywhere and the cell also is a Law
existing everywhere. When they encounter appropriate conditions, they are
decoded and expressed; thus soul and cell appear.
-I understand
that the “software” of the cell must be expressed right when the sperm meets
the ovule, but when is the “software” of the soul expressed? At conception?
-No, the
“software” of the soul is a total of information with the characteristics of
man. Let’s say that they begin “downloading” after it is certain that the
specific embryo will survive, more or less from the sixth month onwards. When the
child reaches 2 years of age, then it is complete and the scull on top of the
head closes.
-What do you
mean by characteristics of man?
-His
potentialities becoming capabilities. Potentialities for emotions, for thought
and reason; and conscience, too, a filter that protects him from big mistakes.
A baby, say, picks up a rattle and is happy about it, so the potentiality for
emotions he had is triggered; it sees little toys hanging over his bed and
these become the cause that triggers the potentiality of thought, when the baby
wonders “what is this”? May I ask you something, too?
- Whatever you
want, replied the boy cheerfully.
- When is a
man born, Alexander?
- You said
that when the embryo exits its mothers’ body then we have the appearance of
man. But to become Man, a man must “understand”, acquire Spirit. A Man is Born
when he acquires Spirit.
- You need not say “you said” if you agree in
something, if you accept it as logical. So which is this decisive moment? Which
is the decisive “I understood” for Man’s Birth?
-I don’t know…. Which is it,
Konstantin?
-How is the
software in a computer activated? When you get a new computer, how do you start
its function?
-I don’t know.
All computers here were already functioning when I came.
-The company
that created the initial software gives some code numbers, you write them on
the computer and so recognition and activation takes place. It is the same with
the Spirit.
-Meaning?
-The Spirit is
born when man recognizes God.
Alexander
stopped asking. He needed some time to think.
- Now I
understand the difference between the Soul and the Spirit. Plants and animals,
too, have Soul, that is a specific “software”. But only Man can have Spirit.
This could explain why Christ, on the cross, said “I commit my Spirit”.
- Do you
accept the existence of Christ?
- Now that I
understand the existence of God… He suddenly stopped, his eyelids flattered.
It’s amazing but I don’t wonder whether God exists, I understand that God
exists.
He leaned his
arms on the table, his head on them and slept.
Konstantin
looked at him with tenderness and smiled, took his beloved Pythagoras and
opened a page at random. After a while Alexander woke up, stretched himself and
looked at Konstantin.
-Is there
reincarnation?
-In order for a Law of Palingenesis to exist, a Law of Genesis must precede. Isn’t it superfluous, since Birth covers, so to say, the need?
-But,
Konstantin, they say that, in a state of hypnosis, people remember previous
lives. How can this happen?
-Alexander,
imagine the Soul as a cd with specific software that can’t be written over,
can’t be altered. People talk about psychological problems, they say this
person has “psychological” problems. If psyche had psychological problems, then
God would have them too. What happens is that man loses touch with his soul, or
loses touch with his conscience; in effect there is no conscienceless person but rather one that has wounded their own
relation with their conscience. The soul is released upon the death of a person
and is like a drop returning to the ocean. The same drop could re-program, be
reborn like a coin that enters a pocket, then exits and goes to someone else’s
pocket. But this is all. Alexander, it is Life, not the life of each one that
has value. Mind you, this is important. The brain is a tool that will either
transmit thought or receive thought. If you don’t programme, others will
programme you. During hypnosis you relax, you leave your brain to the disposal
of the programmer; you can accept whatever he tells you.
People confuse this property of the brain and
think they’ve lived other lives. It’s just that people’s thoughts exist,
energy-wise, in space. A person with, say, a phobia about water, when in a
condition of no-thought, can tune in with another phobia, with another thought
of a person who lived thousand years before. So he thinks he lived then.
-Konstantin,
isn’t it fair that people should have a second chance? Those who have not met
and listened to the great masters, say Pythagoras or Jesus, isn’t it fair for
them that they should have a second chance?
-They could
love. If they did not hear the Right thus to be saved, they could have loved
and through love reach givingness and salvation!
Alexander once
again felt admiration for his teacher and kept silent for a while.
-Was Jesus
like the Man, a sphere of Cognition?
-Man was a
sphere of cognition with a specific goal, he descended as protector of the
planet in order to transform. Jesus came to speak for the Right.
-Konstantin,
if men understood and applied his teaching, the Right, shouldn’t they be
healthy? Doesn’t illness prove that they didn’t understand?
-Well thought,
Alexander! Indeed, if people understood and practiced his teaching, they should
be healthy.
-Will he come
down again?
-There is no
need for it, his Word exists, the Right exists, it’s up to men to understand it….
Science investigates and finds the right, Alexander, what remains is for the
pieces to unit
-Konstantin,
sometimes it seems that Jesus gave somewhat conflicting answers. Why is that
so?
-The teacher
has the right not to answer to a question, but he is responsible for the
answer, for how comprehensible it will be, how much the other person will be
able to stand it.
-Ah! So it is! In other
words, he addressed people of different mind-levels. Maybe he didn’t say
everything either...
-Why should he
have come if he were not to say everything? No, his teaching was complete. Pay
attention, Alexander. In Nature there is only the Right, whatever is different
from the Right is wrong. People often think as Right what’s wrong. They apply
laws, adopt behaviors which sometimes are right and at other times wrong. What
is socially right isn’t always the Right, on the contrary, the Right only
seldom coincides with the socially right. For example, the idea that motion is
beneficial, is both Right and socially right. Jesus said, “Therefore whatever
you desire for men to do to you, you shall also do to them”. This isn’t the
Right, I mustn’t do whatever I desire for others to do to me, because I am not
the measure of the world. But let me explain to you why he said that. At a time
in which “an eye for an eye” was the established law, the Right “love your
enemy” was unthinkable. So Jesus said the socially right thing, do what you
desire others to do to you. This is already a huge progress from “an eye for an
eye” that is still practiced toady. Even at our times, it is a great spiritual
development to do whatever you desire others to do to you. The Right “love your
enemy ” has still not become understood, let alone practiced.
-I understand what you
say, about me not being the measure of the world; practically, just to make an
example, I may like pepper but many others don’t, so when I cook I am careful
with it so everybody can eat.
-Right, said
Konstantin with a smile. Alexander, what does the phrase “love your enemy ”
mean?
-Well, what it
says, to love your enemy. Hmm! Maybe we should define the enemy…
-Jesus made a
spiritual war, so the enemy in on a spiritual level; it has to do with
contrasting points of view. The war is to prove what is right using logic, the
arms are logical arguments. In this way you can have war, dissidence with
somebody but love them, not seek their physical extermination. When people
arrive at making war, at physical extermination, they are in a state of
dementia, they are obsessed by the “spirit of wrong”… They had better leave…
-I see. And
when Jesus took the whip, he did not kill, he did not seek physical
extermination; and at the end he forgave them all. Konstantin, what is the
value of forgiveness?
-Mmm!
Alexander, when a man forgives a person that has harmed him, it’s the forgiver
who feels good, feels peace. For the other person nothing changes, he doesn’t
learn or rectify anything. But has the Spiritual Man, the one that has reached
what we could call a higher level, has he the right to forgive an enemy when he
sees one? Who then would fight the opposing spirit? God forgives all, and he
does that because children are born all the time; that’s how Jesus could
forgive. But the Spiritual Man who sees the opposite spirit has to fight it;
there is no one else to do that, he hasn’t the right to forgive.
-Oh! Is this
why “God loves the thief as well as the master of the house”, Konstantin?
Because the thief, too, can give birth to a child, in other words someone else
that can do the Right?
-Yes, for this
reason too, but also because the thief, by thinking, takes part in the
protective umbrella; he can arrive to logical conclusions as much as the master
can.
-Ah! Then he
might love the thief more, since, in his effort to steal, he thinks more, said
the boy laughing.
Konstantin
laughed and moved his finger meaningfully.
-Do you see
how much the truth liberates? Could you have laughed with this before?
-No, indeed
not…. Konstantin, is a prayer to God different than a prayer to Jesus?
-Imagine God as Light. A Light looking towards the earth. What does
it see?
-Darkness, I
guess?
-That’s right. The Light
can see only light. Man must be spiritually bright for God to see. That’s why
it’s better to address one’s prayer to Jesus. He will intervene to God.
-What should a
man say in his prayer, Konstantin?
-Whatever he
needs to say.
-I’ve come to
realize we exist through others, so I can say that a prayer about the others
will be more heard. What should we ask for others?
-What should a
man ask in his prayers, Alexander, having in mind that the Law of Action and
Reaction always functions, retorted the Biologist.
-Health and
Peace?
-There will be
war and everybody will be ill.
-If you ask
for peace and health there will be war and illness? stammered Alexander
confounded.
-Exactly.
His shock was
big.
-But why?
-In order for
peace to reign on earth, all contrasts, differences and hatred must first be
relieved. There will be war in order for peace to follow.
-I cannot
stomach it…. And what about the wish for health?
-A healthy man
is not one who hasn’t fallen ill yet, but one who has been ill and managed to
cure himself.
They remained
silent for some time; at the end Alexander sighed.
- That’s why
they say that Lord works in strange ways.
- Pay attention,
Alexander. Since you appeared involuntarily, let’s say that Lord is obliged to
help you if you asked for help. How much help would he give you? Can you
express it in a percentage?
Alexander sank
in thought.
-I believe
he’d help me at least by 50%.
-No, you are
not entitled to 50%. You are entitled to
49%. It is necessary that you try a little more. Equal help gradually makes you
end up in inertia and inertia in death. You’ll always take help that is a
little less than the effort you yourself will make.
DIALOG 5. PARADISE
,
HELL, NEMESIS
-Konstantin,
does Paradise exist?
-The Universe works by Laws and Rules. There is
no point in investigating whether they are good or bad, just or unjust, since
we don’t have the power to change them. Laws are Laws and it’s in our best
interest to comprehend them and adjust to them. Comprehending them and
harmonizing with them is good for us. On the contrary, ignorance or trespassing
of the Laws will be bad for us. So Man, depending on whether he has
comprehended the Laws or not, can think right and act right, can think wrong
and make mistakes, or he can simply not think and not do anything. You
understand that there must be some reaction, some result, for these three
cases. What religion says is logical: if you do good, you deserve paradise. If
you do evil, you must have corresponding consequences, let’s call them hell.
And, if you don’t do anything, you are still entitled to paradise.
-Why so? Why be entitled to paradise if you do nothing? And how
can one do nothing?
-Imagine a
house on fire. You can do good by helping to extinguish the fire, you can do
wrong by throwing gas but you can also not take part at all. Let’s say that God
loves so much, that he rewards even the fact that you have not done evil
although you could have.
-What is Paradise and Hell, Konstantin? I mean, what does the
spirit experience there?
-Man has an
energetic subsistence. He continues to exist as energy even after his death. He
does not disappear easily, he may exist even for hundreds of years as a swirl
that keeps revolving until it becomes a dot and disappears. When a man has not
made mistakes, has not disturbed but tried to do right, he has positive
thought, positive energy. This positive energy is compatible with the Laws,
with universal Harmony, with the space of God. Wrong thought is incompatible,
it’s negative. When an evil man dies and gets liberated into the positive
Energy, his swirl undergoes an electrical storm; the more evil, the more wrong
he has been, the stronger the storm will be. The bigger his “ego” in life, the
longer the storm will last.
Pay attention,
Alexander, in these situations, in paradise and hell, a man doesn’t have
awareness of himself. He does not have his consciousness or, more simply, he
doesn’t have his name because he has done nothing great to keep it. Only the
man who manages to arrive to Immortality will take his name with him…. Imagine
sleep. A sleeping person may laugh, feel euphoria, love, all these without self
consciousness. Or he may feel agony, fear, stress, again without being
self-conscious. Death resembles sleep, Alexander, one can feel eternal joy or
eternal panic…
Alexander
stood silent for a while.
-At least I’ll
manage to avoid Hell…. He said, talking mostly to himself.
-It depends on
you. It’s you who may draw away from the right, creating the intensity in the
storm of your Hell.
-I don’t
understand, Konstantin. How can we say that God is love and at the same time
create hell?
-Your
observation is right, logic can’t accept this. But pay attention, Alexander.
The Law of Attraction and the Law of Economy are primary Laws in the Universe.
Eros and Love, the two sovereign emotions of man, are expressions of the two
laws. Eros stems from Attraction and Love from Economy, since with Love more
persons become one.
-Oh! Said
Alexander, impressed.
-So, comprehending the laws, you must behave accordingly. I will
give you an example. You see a river flow. There are rules about how you can
move over the river and, if you apply them, you will travel safely. There are
no rules for you to go contrary to the flow; if you try it, you will either
sink or not travel. You will bear the consequences, if you break the law. Can
you understand this?
-Yes…
-God is Laws,
he is not… anti-laws as well. In the example I made, God exists in the law
which defines the motion in accordance with the flow of the river; there is no
anti-law for motion contrary to the flow. If you go according to the river,
according to the laws, this is good for you, if you go the opposite way, that will
be bad for you. So God does not punish, he didn’t make hell, he hasn’t got
anti-laws to go with your insanity, with your mistakes; it is you who draw away
from the right; you punish yourself; you create your own hell.
-I get it, God
didn’t create hell but, Konstantin, I don’t like this idea of paradise, the
idea of people who loved each other not being together….
-Alexander, in
order for them to be “together”, each one should perceive his or herself, which
means that they should carry their memories with them. Do you imagine a mother
who’s left her children behind, how calm she could be?
-You’re right…
Konstantin, are your parents dead?
-Yes.
-Do you miss
them?
-I try not to
feel so.
-Why?
-Imagine a
bird in a cage….
-I can imagine
that. Alexander interrupted him with a grimace. The bird has wings and they put
it in a cage… It has wings to fly, so how can one imprison it?
-The spirit is
a bird in a cage. When the man dies, it is released. The pain of his dearest
ones for his loss resembles a rope tied on the leg of the bird that shakes it
impeding it to fly. Your pain keeps you tied with the spirit and since you
cannot resurrect it, you follow it.
-If heavens
would open and your mother would appear, what would you say to her, Konstantin?
- Nothing. I
would run into her arms.
Alexander
lowered his eyes; he was touched; he could not decide whether he was lucky not
to ever have experienced this loss.
-But
Konstantin, it is impossible not to think about your beloved dead…
-Think of them
with gratitude, only gratitude can affect their spirit, give them good dreams…
-OK, God did
not create hell, it is every man that creates their own hell, this I
understand, I find it logical, but then who made the devil?
-Man, by
thinking, transmits waves. The more his certainty about what he “understands”,
the longer the waves last. He may be sure about something right but also about
something wrong. His wrong thoughts also have a duration and they coordinate,
they acquire dynamics, become an algorithm. This is the evil, the adverse
spirit, the devil.
-Oh! So man
has created the devil, too…
-His mistakes,
the wrong thoughts, became the wrong spirit that tries to erase whatever
opposes it, in other words positive thinking, the right but also the source
transmitting it, that is the man who thinks right.
-How can one
oppose the devil?
- For the
devil not to be able to “see” you, you must get better every day. Let’s say the
devil has “seen” a person X. If X makes a logical conclusion, then it’s X+1, a
different person, another man. Every conclusion gets you on a higher level, you
find yourself in another space, you
break forth, you are at the front. Careful, Alexander. The whole manhood is in
the space of devil, in the space of wrong. So, say, the devil does not have to
hunt down anyone personally. If someone manages to exit, this doesn’t preoccupy
the devil. His opposition appears if the liberated person tries to make an
offer, to liberate someone else, too. Lower than the grass you must be, very
humble, in order not to make a personal enemy of the devil.
- Konstantin,
can the devil work miracles? They used to tell us he did supernatural things!
-First of all,
there is no discrimination in natural, supernatural and metaphysical things,
all are one. It is a totality but, the less one understands the Laws, the more
subtotals one creates. Miracles are made by men, by the power of their thought;
being the smallest part of matter, thought can intervene and produce a change.
If man really believes in
it, or understands how it works, the result is the
same whether he tunes in with god or
with the devil. Everyone can work miracles, as Jesus did, so man shouldn’t be
so impressed with them.
- What was
wonderful in Jesus were not his miracles, but his Word. “Love your enemy ”.
This is a miracle to think of, a miracle to put into action.
-Even by this
alone we can realize that Jesus was not a man; no man could think of loving his
enemy .
-So, if he was
not a man ?
-He was God…
Konstantin, how can I earn paradise?
-You must
realize the law of action – reaction. Each action entails a reaction of equal quantity and quality. Man does not belong to another sphere, he is also subjected to this
law. If you do good, you will receive good.
But it is you who must act first; in order to get, you shall give first;
first comes the action and then the reaction. Look how simple it is, Alexander.
Mothers, in every part of the earth, at all times, when asked what kind of
child they’d like to have, say “a good person”. No one ever said she wanted to
give birth to a bad person. Nature, God, speaks through the mother. What does she want a good child for? So that it does good. Good is
what really matters for a person to do. In reality, a man’s worth is his worth for the
others.
-Konstantin, I
realize there is no “punishment” law, but what is that we call “nemesis”?
-There is a
difference between making a mistake and being consciously evil. Let’s say that
when a man does not know what the Right is, it is a natural consequence for him
to make a mistake. But when he is being consciously evil, then
this must stop. This person stands in
line for self-rejection, but for nature it’s not important if he “goes” now or
in 5 years. The evil, however, must stop now. Look, Alexander. When
someone kills, he is put to jail. But is this a punishment? His life goes on,
it is probable he’ll exit jail and it is also probable that he kills again. If,
instead of him, his child were to go to jail, the ache of his soul would be his
punishment. After a while the child would become accustomed to the life in
jail, but he would ache the whole time through and he should certainly not
think of killing again. Nature works in a somewhat similar way. Man practices
pieces of viciousness and mistakes but he is not consciously evil. He who consciously
does evil, triggers the mechanism for the interruption of this action. God does
not see him personally, but sees his relationship with his beloved, the source
that nurtures him, that gives him liveliness, and this source is cut off. If
the action is a murder, the reaction it will provoke will be centered on the
source nurturing him: if he lives though his child then the rejection is
centered there, causing his beloved to be punished.
- I find it
hard, that someone else should get punished for something I do.
- You’ re
looking at it emotionally, you should see it through logic.
- Yes, I understand it,
I understand that in this way someone might be stopped from doing evil again,
provided of course he understands how the Law works. Hmm… Well, I guess it is
perceived, since everybody knows the saying about the sins of the fathers being
visited upon the children. But why do they say that God disciplines those he loves?
-There may be
someone you know, whom you believe to be a good man and hold in high esteem;
seeing various sufferings befall him, you can’t explain how a good man is so
harassed. So people say that “God sends sufferings to those he loves”, but does
this seem logical to you? A man is born with a “yeast” of conscience. This
“yeast”, this basic purity protects him from big mistakes; it controls him
until he reaches a high level. A man who has succeeded in retaining the purity
of his soul is a challenge for the devil. He tries to get him, to win him over,
thus creating problems, adversities, punishing him.
Life is enough of a struggle. It doesn’t need
the interference of God to make it more difficult, so it’s not logical to say
that God harasses whom he loves. It is more fitting to say that God “punishes”
a consciously evil person and Devil a good one…
DIALOG 6. DEMONIC
POSSESSION, SPIRITUAL MAN, OVERPOPULATIONΝ.
-Konstantin, what is a
person possessed by demons? What happens in this condition, why does a man
passes from being well to doing crazy things in a minute?
-In the Universe,
Alexander, Laws are specific, absolute. A person that has certainty is likewise
absolute; this certainty is transmitted from his brain to the space surrounding
him.
-It does not spread
indefinitely, it covers a space around him that’s a sphere. This is his
energetic body and in order that nothing “intrudes” in it, he must be thinking;
if you don’t program yourself someone else will program you.
When a man dies, he continues to exist energetically. So we might say that someone who was evil is still around somewhere. If a man has no certainty, no logic, he might receive such energy.
-Ah! Is that
how he gets possessed?
When a man dies, he continues to exist energetically. So we might say that someone who was evil is still around somewhere. If a man has no certainty, no logic, he might receive such energy.
-We could say
he gets viruses.
-And how could
be healed?
-By repenting.
Sincere repentance, when he is in his right mind, of course, entails
humiliation; the “ego” subsides, the energetic body opens up and thus the
demon, the virus, can go. The way used by the church is also effective, an exorcist’s certainty and prayer can clean
him, and so can water; he should sleep by a river, near clean and running
water; water can clean the energetic body.
-And rain?
-Rain too, but
we have invented the umbrella.
-I want to be a
good person, Konstantin, I want to become Man but I don’t know the Right and so
I can’t do good. What is the good a Spiritual Man must do, how should he act?
Konstantin
sketched a form.
-Man is born
with feelings, emotions and capability of thought. If a child of, say, three
years, touches something hot, it won’t touch it again. Through its mistakes, it
begins to learn, to find the Right. Initially it might make 9 mistakes and get
one thing right. Then 8 mistakes and 2 right things. It draws away from and
then returns to the axis of the Right. First it must understand what health is,
so that it manages to hold its health in its
hands but also in order to have a logical axis. The contrary would be
like saying that one can provide the right solution to a problem of mankind
without knowing what one should eat! If a man doesn’t complete the
auto-therapy, he can’t understand more complicated things nor manage to put
them into action. On a second level he carries on what he has understood, he
helps other people cure themselves.
It’s here that
he becomes a Man; it’s here that he is born. From then on he must understand
the relations of human beings, all the problems that come from the fact that
the roles of man and woman have not been comprehended yet. At the end he
concerns himself with the problems of mankind.
-Konstantin, we
don’t know what exactly is going on up on the surface; maybe our equipment
simply broke down, so it might be that we are confined all this time here for
nothing, or that there has been a small… or big disaster… We agreed not to talk
about it and go out after five years have passed… but all the same I’d like to
know your opinion about what may be going on…
-No, Alexander,
let’s not talk about it.
-Ok, so let’s
resume our talk as if nothing has changed out there, and talk about the
problems of mankind.
-One of the
biggest problems of mankind is overpopulation. We have arrived at 7 billion!!!
Look, Alexander, the planet is determinate; it has determinate space,
determinate ground and determinate sea. This means that the number of those it
can feed is also determinate, meaning there must be a limit. Limits are there
between the animals, since one eats the other. Between men, however, there is a
very serious problem. Unemployment in the world is around 13% and it will go
up. These people need to be fed.
If we admit
that each person is allowed one euro per day for food and shelter, there’s need
of 910 millions every day. What global economy, which global bank can stand a
situation like this? Half of the world population is concentrated in towns. The
rest must work, must produce food for themselves but also for the inhabitants
of the towns. Food must be transported, put in warehouses, sold, and there must
be a profit, too, since, with no profit, rural population will not embark upon
the trouble to produce food for those living in towns but only for themselves.
As the population goes higher, in order for the corresponding food and profit
to exist, the quality of the food will drop.
This situation
of overpopulation stems from the absence of intellectual pleasure. It shows a
folly, craziness for sex.
-What you are
saying is horrible, I hadn’t thought about it at all… Konstantin, is there a
solution?
- There must be
a strict control of births, high criteria in order for someone to have
descendants. When deciding an adoption, a heap of formalities is needed,
papers, credentials testifying that the couple is mentally sane, economically
fit, and they have pieces of property to leave the child. Ten or fifteen
couples apply and one of them adopts. Why shouldn’t the same apply for our own
children?
- That’s how it
should be done, agreed Alexander fervently. There wouldn’t be so many abandoned
children if there was strict control…. Konstantin, what is the population
limit, what determines it?
- The water,
the circle of water on the surface of the earth. Where there is a river, a
lake, a water source, there can be a community. But we don’t have the right to
pierce the earth to get water; it does not belong to us, it belongs to future
generations.
Alexander
looked at the points of the triangle Konstantin had sketched. He thought with awe that Konstantin’s brain
hovered over the problems of mankind and tried to find solutions… That he might
help him! Maybe he’d help a little with his questions, compelling him in documenting, thus seeing the problem and
the solution more clearly.
-Konstantin, could we
say that the Spiritual Man has need of an assistant?
-Yes, he needs the Rich
Man.
-The rich man? Asked Alexander confounded.
-Each man is entitled
to know what the Right is. Each man must “understand” and, if he “understands”,
he’ll do the right thing. What the Spiritual Man can do for mankind is to
awaken it, that’s why his word must be heard. That’s where the Rich Man will
help. Now I’ll ask you in what way, Alexander.
The young man
reflected for a while.
-If he builds hospitals
health won’t improve because the mistakes will be repeated. In order for him to
help so that the Spiritual Man be heard, he must build schools, say,
Philosophical Schools where the Right will be taught.
-Exactly. He’ll save people but he himself will
also be saved since he will receive the benefit of Philosophy.
-But will he do it,
Konstantin? Why should he spend his beautiful money?
-He‘ll do it if he is
Rich, say, Very rich If he is plain rich he won’t.
-Why?
-As a rich man, your
concern is to cover your own needs. As Very Rich you don’t have needs, you want
to cover other people’ needs. It is an inclination. It’s a joy. You give a coin to a poor and you are glad all day long. That’s
why wealth must be concentrated in the hands of few. Say, in the hands of 5
people. In order for the problems of mankind to be solved, nearly all the
wealth is needed… Let me ask you one more thing. When will the Spiritual Man
leave?
- Leave?
-Yes, when will he say
“I am not needed here any more”.
Alexander
looked at him pensively.
-The work of the
Spiritual Man is to talk. So he’ll leave when he’ll cease talking, when he’ll
have nothing more to say.
-And when would that
be?
-…. When there will be no more questions?
-That’s right, said
Konstantin smiling.
Alexander
smiled too, satisfied.
-Ah! Konstantin,
might this be why Jesus asked God to “let this cup pass” from him? As a
teacher, he felt there were questions.
-Yes, that’s logical.
DIALOG 7. IMMORTALITY.
-What is immortality,
Konstantin?
-Man cannot imagine Immortality. What
happens is that he doesn’t want to die. Philosophy concerns the research of the
Right; the philosopher formulates questions. He forms an image in his mind and
tries to find the way to explain and fulfill what seems logical to him. You,
then, as a philosopher, what question would you formulate about this matter?
-Konstantin, before
starting our conversations, I wouldn’t have posed any question, because in my
mind this was a closed matter. If you can see that “everything living dies”
what further question would you ask?
-In fact, having in
mind that everything living dies, people don’t make any question about it; they
cannot imagine non-death and they can’t find a way to obtain it.
-Yes, that might be
happening….
-Let’s start the
questions that could carry us further. If we ask “must everything living also
die” does this question open the road to investigation?
-To me it seems
harmonious that something should have a beginning, a middle and an end. So, I
would answer “yes, whatever lives must die”.
-And in this way you wouldn’t think of enquiring further. What if
the question were “must that which gives life die”?
-Ah! To this question I would answer “no, that
which gives life must not die, it must live”.
-So we made the right question. And the answer
that satisfies us logically, opens the road to investigation. We won’t be
thinking of immortality, but of non-death.
-OK.
-Have you understood what hell is?
-Yes, it’s the situation that corresponds to a
man who did evil.
-Good! And paradise?
-It’s for the people who did no evil and who
did good whenever they could.
-What is the maximum good that a person could
do to another person?
-Give him immortality?
-But how could he give something that he can’t even imagine? Asked
Konstantin smiling.
-How then? I said a silly thing!
-Think again, plainly and logically. I am
asking you again. What is the maximum good that a person could do to another
person?
-I’ll say what people usually mention or wish.
“Health is foremost”.
-That’s right. It is the biggest good a person could do to another, give him
health, show him how he can be healthy. If now he gives health to five people,
to 100 people, to a thousand people, isn’t it fair that his rewards be bigger
than if he helped one person?
-Yes, that’s fair.
-And what if he manages
to give health to, say, the whole humankind, shouldn’t his rewards be still
bigger?
-Certainly.
-Could you imagine a
bigger good than this?
-Well, if he manages to
give health to the whole mankind, there is no bigger good.
-Oh but there is. To create conditions of health
for future generations.
-Oh! Right.
-Could you think of a
bigger good than this?
-No, certainly not. There is no bigger good than
this.
-So this person who’s
done the biggest good, who’s cared for the health, in other words the life of
others, isn’t he entitled to the greatest good, to Live?
-Oh! Yes, he is entitled to Life!
-Then he dies, that is
he changes state. His body changes form, releases its molecules, their binding,
disappears. And after he has lived his life for others, he is now entitled to
live for himself. He becomes, in a way, God’s collaborator. He can do as he
pleases, be reborn as many times as he wants. He becomes god but not the God.
Alexander
remained silent for a while, enjoying the idea of the man-god.
-What prevented man
from reaching immortality, Konstantin?
-If a man can
understand one thing, he can understand everything. However, this takes time.
When he gets ill he cannot think, he is all absorbed in finding a solution to
his problem. The right breathing was found recently and so, if he has assured his
health, he’ll have the time to understand everything; it follows that now man
can reach immortality.
-But, Konstantin,
hasn’t there ever been a healthy man?
-Alexander, health is
not the aim. One is healthy for oneself; giving to the others is the
aim. When you are healthy you can have to time to understand this and practice
giving.
-And how can health be
obtained in practical terms for the whole human species and for future
generations?
-It is very simple. By having the breathing method
be taught at schools.
-It’s really simple.
DIALOG
8. CHOICE, AXIS OF THE EARTH.
-Konstantin, why does
the brain react in the same way towards the good and the evil? Wouldn’t it be
safer if it were harder for someone to acquire a bad habit?
The biologist
smiled
-If this were the case, there would be no freedom of
thought.
-Ah!
-However, the
fact one can think freely does not mean one has free will.
-What do you
mean?
-If we accept
that man has a Role, then he has no choice, he must act according to his Role.
Let’s say that man “appears” but as a child he has no choice, he obeys his parents. As
his body grows, let’s say up to 30, he lives in a period of grace in which he
begins to understand what is right, making 9 things wrong and 1 right, 8 things
wrong and two right. From the age of 30 onwards he must do the right thing. If
he does not, he enters into the process of rejection, his time begins to tick, that’s why
time begins to show on him.
-Oh, I get
that; it is like what happens with a doctor. As long as he is a student, we
don’t put claims on him, but from the moment he declares himself a doctor, the patient demands that he be a
good one… But, Konstantin, since man must ultimately do what’s right, why isn’t
he born having inherently, as a program, only the right?
-You mean that
he should be wise. Alexander, for nature, a wise man is the most useless thing.
-Why, asked the
young man shocked.
-Man must have
freedom of thought. His thought is the frequency required by the planet in
order for the protective umbrella to exist. For as many years as he thinks and
finds the right, he is useful. If he arrives to understanding everything, that
is if he becomes wise, he won’t enter the process of thinking; he’ll be the
most useless being in nature!
-Konstantin,
what are the consequences of wrong thoughts?
-Wrong thinking
leaves holes in the umbrella; the earth could explode, or the axis of the
earth could change?
-What does that
mean?
-Have you seen
a top swirl?
-Sure!
-It swirls
around itself and at the same time it makes a circle around an imaginary point.
-Yes….
-In its path
around this imaginary point, its axis changes and while, say, it had been
swirling with an inclination towards the center of the circle, it swirls with an
inclination outwards.
-Indeed…
-Imagine the
earth instead of the top. What consequences would this move have?
-Undoubtedly
disastrous.
-Exactly, we
would have large displacement of water. Only high mountaintops, over 6,000
meters would remain unscathed. Whatever were on them could be safe. Researchers
have found that axis displacement has already occurred three times in the past.
It is a natural phenomenon occurring every 24,000 years or so. However it can
happen earlier if men do not act their role, which is if they don’
transform. Radiation which kills the cells is chaos, and chaos can’t be put
under control, so for the earth to survive, those who are not needed for the
process of survival will be destroyed in order for those remaining to do what
it takes.
-I get it; it
is as if the earth threw us off her back…and it wouldn’t be unfair, said
Alexander and sighed. Konstantin, might cataclysms transmitted in narrations be
due to this displacement of axis of the earth?
-Indeed they
might.
-I’ve always
wondered about this selective rescue offered by god to Deucalion, to Noah…
-Fossils of sea
organisms found on mountains prove that the displacement of the axis of the
earth has already occurred three times. If the axis starts to move slowly, here
will be a critical point in which the volume of the water will abruptly force
it to a larger movement. This would result in waves up to 3000 m high and in
torrential rain. If we leave theological things out, could one foresee the
forthcoming cataclysm? A good and clever observer could deduce it by logic. It
is known that our ancestors built temples with specific points from where they
could see for example the sunrise at solstices. Even the slightest displacement
of the earth axis would make the sun and the stars appear at a different point.
So the clever and attentive observer could deduce that the sun and the moon
were coming down on his head and would build a shelter; or that something was
wrong with the earth and he would build a ship.
-Ah! That seems
logical…
DIALOG 9. ENLIGHTENMENT,
ECSTASY.
-Konstantin,
since man must think, and he must think right, could we say that those who try to practice
non-thought are kind of not liked by God?
-Alexander,
what’s desired here is certainty, the waves our brains transmit in a state of
certainty. One may be certain even about something wrong; those waves are
equally useful. It’s just that something wrong will be proven wrong and be
discarded, while the waves of right are forever. In oriental philosophies they
use contemplation to arrive at non-thought so that, by not thinking, they
manage not to make mistakes. By not thinking you avoid mistakes, you are saved
from hell but you cannot reach immortality.
-I find it very
strange, Konstantin, how and why they arrived at not thinking; what could the
gain be? In order to resolve one’s own problem one must think…
-Meditation,
logically, must have appeared in the first human societies. Imagine a group of
primitives trying to survive. In the whole group one is more skilful; he is
accepted and recognized as the leader. Now all the problems of the group are
transferred to him, it’s he that must find their solution. It’s natural for a
man who wants to think to isolate himself. So imagine this primitive chief
somewhere on a mountain, alone, him, nature and his problem. You’ll have
noticed that, when you think very hard about something, you lose yourself for a
few seconds….
-Yes…
-You’ll have
noticed that, sometimes, ideas come to you as if they were not yours, as if
they came from somewhere else…
-Indeed,
sometimes I’ve felt as if something arrived from above…
-The same
happened to the primitive chief. By thinking about his problem, he lost himself
in non-thought and then the idea, the solution came. It happened by accident
but, since it was successful, they started to practice it deliberately. Laws as
frequencies are everywhere in space and carry all the information. By not
thinking you open up your brain to accept the specific information you need. (15) You get
enlightenment.
- Konstantin, is non-thought related with fire-walking? I’ve read
it’s a timeless and global phenomenon. How come that people walking on burning
coal don’t get burnt?
- Indeed; it
has also been observed that some people pierce their body and it seems they
feel no pain nor bleed. Yes, it’s a result of non-thought. When in ecstasy, a
person is in a state of non-thought, out of touch with the nervous system so
the information of pain is not transmitted to and from the brain. It has
likewise been observed that crazy people feel no pain, since they are not in
touch with their own nervous system.
- I understand
this, I mean I understand that there is no pain, but why is there no burn, no
wound?
- Man is an
expression of the Law of Life. When he manages to practice non-thought, the Law
expresses itself faster. If, let’s say, a cell divides every two hours, in the
state of non-thought we have a faster division, which means therapy.
- Ah! So… But,
Konstantin, a crazy person bleeds, although also being in a state of
non-thought. Why is that?
- Since he is
spiritually dead, he is dead for nature; the Law of Life is not expressed in
him. On the contrary, the others arrived at non-thought by effort.
DIALOG 10. WAR, PROGRAMMING, SHOCK.
-What is the
meaning of fatherland, Konstantin?
-It’s the space
covered by your thought. The broader you think, the larger your country is. If
your thought extends out to a hundred meters, then it is these you feel like your
space, it’s your neighborhood…
-How short
thoughts did we have as boys! We formed gangs fighting with other
neighborhoods… Maybe some day man will arrive at having the whole earth as his
country. Is there any sense in reaching further?
-Further is a
chaotic situation for the mind since it doesn’t really need to go that far, if
not for curiosity.
-And what is
civil war?
-Look,
Alexander, how serious a conclusion can be drawn from civil war and
revolutionaries. In civil war there is no matter of space, people fight for
their ideas. When a brother kills a brother, when they arrive at killing their
parents, where does love go? A revolutionary is inspired by an idea, he savvies
it as right without it being the Right; in other words he sees a piece of the
Right and this piece inspires him so strongly that he forgets love; he forgets,
say, his wife, his children; he follows his dream, he may be killed but he
doesn’t care; what matters to him is to see his idea transmitted and come true.
All this proves that man is not his feelings but his thoughts.
-But,
Konstantin, the revolutionary may have not grasped the Right but right he
grasped. What should he have done?
-He is in a
hurry, Alexander, he wants the right to
prevail at once, even by violence; he could lead to war in order for his
thought to come true. Revolution is an act of violence and in society
everything should be done slowly, as in nature, where changes come about
slowly. The revolutionary seeds the sow but he must not hurry to see the tree,
too. And since his spirit is restless, and he wants the result, to calm down,
he indulges in “programming”.
-What is
programming?
-The brain
functions better when it has an image, that’s why he creates one. This image stays and is called “thought-form”. When
someone wants something very badly, one thinks about it all the time, in
detail, creating steady images; the more one thinks about them, the more one
kindles them. This is how one programs a fact.
- So that’s why! Well, listen to this! Every
Christmas we were allowed one and only leave. They made a draw with all our
names, and one of us would win it.
There was this friend one year that used to tell us, “I’ll get the leave this
year”. Whenever there was talk about the leave, he cried “I’ll get it this
year”. And he did win it! I was so impressed by this and wondered how it came
about.
- He had
certainty. The certainty of his thought switched on mechanisms and he
maintained them every time he spoke about this leave. Man has the right to
practice “programming”, that’s why it happens. He has no right, though, to
“program” another human being. This works against him.
- There was a
time when I wanted to win the lottery!
-You could have
“programmed” it and made it happen. But you must be very careful with your
“program”. If you had got the money, you would have realized at the end whether
it had been good or bad for you.
-And how can I
know beforehand if something will be for my good or not?
Konstantin
nodded and smiled.
-You’ll know,
if you know the source you tune in to; if you ask God, whatever you get will be good
for you and, if you don’t get anything, then again this will be for your good.
-Konstantin, can it be that the prophets
practised “programming”?
-Look, Alexander, this
is serious. Prophecies, oracles that came true in history, as well as facts
that are foreseen and then come true in everyday life, induce us to think about
why and how they happened. There are many people who, trying to explain, arrive
at the conclusion that there is the Future. Let’s say that the Future exists,
that every possible deed of everyone is energetically registered in the
universe and that at a
certain moment someone “sees” a deed, expresses it and
the Future collapses in it. This probability isn’t logical because the Universe
functions with economy and this isn’t economical, in other words there is waste
of energy with the deeds which shall not materialize.
The brain is a
transmitter and a receiver, it transmits and receives frequencies. This means
that it can program but also be programmed; it means that if you don’t program,
others will program you. Nowadays this is known as mind control; secret
experiments are going on and much is being said about this matter, which was
already known in ancient times. Probably by chance someone thought of
something, wanted it very much and then it happened. The fact gave him
certainty, made him think that he could also bring about something else, and
that’s how magicians came to be. In essence a magician “programs” for example a
man so that he acts in a specific manner; the surer he is, the better
“programming” he does. By extension, prophecies and oracles are also “programs”
.Someone imagined, thought of something, expressed it and created a
“thought-form”; as those who accept it grow more numerous, they build the
thought-form up and make it happen.
In order to
defend himself against the programming of others, a man must think, must try to
think logically.
One should,
however, also prevent oneself from programming other people. When someone says
“I want this to happen”, “I’ll do it”, he makes a “program” and let’s say that
the Universe follows up a couple of times or three. But he’s no God, can’t have
it his own way and sooner or later he’ll fail. That’s why we Christians wisely
use expressions like “God permitting” or “With the will of God”; in this way we
don’t program, we let Harmony express itself.
- I understand…. Konstantin,
during our conversations, I felt shocked many times. What is this shock?
-A mental
whacking.
-Indeed, I often felt as if I had been whacked…. Konstantin,
why do people clap their hands or bring them to their face when they hear
something that shocks them?
- People indeed make these gestures…. Now look,
Alexander. The biological and energetic body of a human being are connected in the neurons of the
brain. If someone has understood, say, 50 conclusions and suddenly receives a
very serious piece of information or a conclusion worth of 40, this large
difference makes for a big humiliation and the contact between the biological and
energetic body is lost. To make an ugly example, if a mother suddenly hears
that her child has been killed, she can faint or die…. These gestures, these
clashes, entail pain. The pain tones up the instinct of life, gives the
sensation of “self” of “existence”; transmitted to the neurons of the brain, it
restores the connection of the biological and the energetic body.
Part 2
THROUGH THE
SPEAKERS THERE CAME the voice of the Security responsible.
“Everybody
please gather in the conference area in 10 minutes”
They could not tell day from night.
Sure their calendars showed the date and clocks the time but the steady
environmental conditions made each one function at their personal rhythm. So in
the conference room it was evident that some of them had just waked up. They
didn’t have the time to discuss anything; the President appeared with his
escort, sat down and looked at them.
- Ladies and gentlemen get ready. We
are going up.
They could not imagine the extend of
the disaster, but they knew there would be things that had remained unchanged.
The sun would embrace them again, the wind would dance them at its own rhythm,
the sea would chisel their boyishness, the moon and the stars would make them
philosophize and the night would teach them how to sleep and dream again. This
remembrance of the world transported them, longing bloated their
chests and, like in a state of shock, their minds and lips repeated the phrase
“we are going up”, “… going up”, “… going up”…
The security men went first. Like astronauts they walked on the
platform and, with the wishes of all, pushed the button that would take them 30
meters higher, on the earth they hadn’t seen for such a long time.
At every
dividing panel they conquered, the scientists celebrated arriving closer to the
surface. At the third panel the platform wobbled; before they had the time to
worry, it started gliding again but, before the fourth panel, it stood still
for good. After a while the men climbed out. Through their visors, their tense
faces were eloquent.
- The fifth
panel doesn’t move; there is a place where it seems deformed; the iron must
have melted on the outside, said the security responsible. It’s a good thing
though that our detectors haven’t shown any change up to that point.
Some disappointed
exclamations were heard, but the Engineer-responsible for installations, water
supply and oxygen generator raised his hands.
-No problem,
I’ll bring the acetylene welder and with a little help I’ll cut it loose in ten
minutes.
Never in his
life had he collected so many handshakes and smiles and everybody wanted to
help so that they would arrive on the surface a minute earlier. They knew what
separated them from the world up there were the few centimeters of iron of the
fifth panel and a few steel pins at the entrance.
Although hampered by their suits, the Engineer
and the security men worked with zeal and pushed the cutting edge along the
stuck area. They took the Engineer down, had some rest for a while and came
back. Grasping at the handles, they moved the panel aside. It glided into its
base, freeing them from the next-to-last obstacle.
- It’s open! Cried the Security responsible between everybody’s
cheers. People had gathered in the control room and, from the cameras
integrated into their helmets, they could see almost as clearly as the other
three.
The sixth dividing panel, that of the entrance, was deformed. It should be cut in its
entire perimeter and removed. This would take a lot of work and time and no-one
had the patience to wait. They had to see now, even if it would be just a
glance outside, but right away. The President gave the order to open a small
hole, large enough for one man and said to Alexander to get ready; he would be
the one to step outside first. The steel door, deformed like a piece of old
wood, made him uneasy. He liked the young man but he was disposable.
Alexander looked impressive in suit. He looked around him with serious countenance; his eyes stopped at Mary. She thought they were sending him as a lamb to his slaughter and made a move to protest. An imperceptible nod, a small uplifting of his brow stopped her. Suddenly it seemed to her that he was the most appropriate to go up first, brave and worthy as no-one else. Miss Mary blushed.
Before cutting the whole circle off the panel, they put supports
underneath so that the piece would fall in a controlled way. Together there
fell some soil. But first sunlight came in. In utter silence, in ecstasy, they
saw the sunlight. The boy stood underneath and looked at the blue sky. No-one
moved, no-one said anything. Finally the sky! How could they have lived so many
years without seeing it!
He stepped carefully up the ladder and took a deep breath before the
great moment. One centimeter after another his head came out of the earthy womb
and he emerged like a new Adam out of the soil. His eyes searched for the sun
and he thanked God that he was able to see it again. He stepped on the earth
and looked around him. Everything was as he remembered it, but one thing was
missing. As far as his eyes went, he couldn’t see green anywhere. Not a tree,
not a little branch, not a blade of grass… His body quivered and his eyes
looked for some sign of life. Not a bird, not an insect, nothing, nothing…
He tried to pull his helmet off but he heard a loud “no” from the
Environmentalist. Detectors in the control room had not detected any dangerous
radiation, except that atmospheric carbon dioxide had climbed at 5%.
Two days later they all managed to go out on the surface. The
President with the mini-bus and Konstantin on his side inspected the
surrounding area. Where five years earlier there had been a city, now there was
nothing. Around them there was not a sign of life
and the sea had subsided. They didn’t exchange a word because the
President did not want the others to hear. To his ears came disappointed
interjections and phrase exchanges centering on one thing” we won’t ever live
up here again”. The President felt likewise and waited till they returned to
Oneiroupolis so he could speak with his wise Biologist.
The President, the mightiest man in there, was the first to bend. He
was a man who used to thrive upon society, upon the power of authority and his
ego. Now he felt empty, he didn’t care for anything and thought to give an end
to his emptiness. He invited the security men and told them that, from this
moment on, Konstantin was to take the command of Oneiroupolis. In their
presence he handed him the keys to the arsenal and the list of weapons and ammunition. Then he isolated
himself in the “capsule”. Konstantin admeasured the weaponry, removing also the
weapons of the men; then he made everything secure and hid the key.
People had gathered early in the conference room. They talked about
the facts and sorrow was diffuse. They had endured the disaster because they
hoped that some day they would return to the surface and they imagined that
life and their life would go on, maybe difficult, maybe different but it would
still continue on earth.
Most of them were gathered around the Engineer.
- We could use sand to
construct globes of glass, and cultivate plants that will create the suitable
atmosphere with time.
- Pyramids took less time to build, commented the Chemist.
- We could make small, easy-to-use masks and learn to live with
these.
- Like poor Persephone, we’ll spend half of our day upon the earth
and the other half underground, commented again the Chemist.
- Give us a break! Nothing suits you, what is it that you want anyway? Shouted
the responsible Engineer.
- I want the Earth, and the life I knew…
Most sighed and walked away. They sat down and waited but, when the
time came, the president did not appear. They found it strange, since he was
punctual to the minute. Instead, Konstantin made his way and sat down on his
seat.
The Biologist looked at them and started speaking
softly, as always.
- We could do a lot of things in order to inhabit earth again, but
we don’t have that right. We, as humanity, had our chance and ended in
disaster. For our selves, we can only pray and ask forgiveness from God. But we
have an obligation toward this planet. We have the obligation to carry the life
existing in this underground arc to the surface. Plants, animals and humans.
Not us; our children
There was a commotion upon these last words. Someone from security
whispered something about the retreat of the President for Konstantin and this
triggered one more wave of comments. Then, as
one person, they turned and looked at the scientist with renewed interest.
PHOENIX PROJECT
The eight women who were able for procreation would give their
ovules every month and all men should give sperm. When the conditions up on the
surface would be appropriate, they would place the fertilized ovules in all
women. In this way the children would be children of all.
They would modify the masks so that they’d be able to work wearing
them; and they’d build rough shelters near the work areas.
Konstantin chose two areas divided by a river. One of them, at the
foot of a hill, was to become the space for humans and the other, some
kilometers away, would be the area for the animals. There was no easy access
between the two areas; they were almost one day’s walk from one another. They’d
have to dig until they found suitable soil for the plants.
In the humans area they would plant more trees and in the animals
area more bulbs and vegetables. Konstantin pointed out to the Agriculturist
that they should be planted with more space in
between since they would grow more due to the elevated carbon dioxide. They
would have to create a cave on the hill, where humans would live, and also
create two creeks, one passing near the cave so that there would be easy access
to water, and one in the animals area.
All constructions should look natural, as if they had not been made
by human hands.
ALEXANDER MOVED near Konstantin’s room. They were together all the time, the Biologist explaining to the youth everything that should be done for PHOENIX.
Many departments collaborated to build the mask-transformer of the
atmosphere. The respirator would lean on the back of their necks and it was
light, but it worked on a battery which they had to recharge every 5 hours, and
they also had to clean the filter. The Engineer constructed a portable booth
out of transparent nylon and iron rods. In there, they would keep the dynamo
which would charge the batteries while also creating a suitable atmosphere for
them to disconnect and get some rest.
For the sake of economy, they had decided to work all together in
the same area. They would begin with the animal area then they would move to
the area for the humans and finally they would make the salt pits and the
fishery.
The first thing they relocated were the eggs. When the first chick
popped out, everybody present waited anxiously to see how it’d move. Half
dazed, it took some steps and began pinching bread cramps and seeds. They all
burst in applause and the Veterinary grabbed it and kissed it. In a few hours,
the place near the entrance was bursting with the tweeting of the nestlings.
The Veterinary followed them closely and after a week he said that
their health and growth were better than expected.
The importance given by the Biologist to every detail impressed most
of the people; sometimes they did not understand some of his orders but they
all trusted him and the Dentist woman said, jokingly “Konstantin is Noah and us
his livestock”.
Alexander had matured and his whole posture carried a special
seriousness that didn’t go unnoticed by the rest. They realized how important a
role he would play in the new generation.
They felt an amazing vitality. They worked with so much enthusiasm
from morning till night that they almost didn’t feel tired. And when they
gathered in the room, they talked about the work that should be done in the
morning; they felt anxious for the new day to come so they would go on
creating…
One day they were working in the cave, removing rocks, when the
Environmentalist exclaimed joyously “come see what I’ve discovered!” They
gathered around him and the man showed them three rocks.
-Big deal! The Chemist mocked.
The Environmentalist walked in front of him and hit the stones
together, sending a spark between the Chemist’s legs; he looked at him
triumphantly. The others applauded but the Chemist threw up his arms.
-So what makes you so happy?
-They are firestones! They will be lighting fire with them, you
fool!
-Just tell me, clever one, what they might be lighting with them.
Toilet paper? No wood nor leaf can ignite this way.
Some said “he’s right” and only the Agriculturist started to laugh
with the mocking face of the Chemist and the expression of the Environmentalist
who was clearly searching for an answer.
-Why are you laughing? The Environmentalist asked the Agriculturist,
annoyed.
- Because I have seeds of cotton!
- Have you got fava beans? Konstantin
asked the Agriculturist a little later.
- Sure, they are my favorite dish, said the man proudly.
- Don’t plant them, he retorted and walked away accompanied by
Alexander.
- Because of Pythagoras? Alexander asked the Biologist.
- Because of Favism, said the man.
- Ah! Do you think that Pythagoras had detected the connection?
- He must have, judging by his
insistence against them…
DIALOG 11. NUTRITION
- Can you imagine which was man’s first food, Alexander?
- I guess the one he managed to get his hands on first. Fruit,
greens, worms…
- Would you be able to eat worms?
- If there were nothing else…. Konstantin, which is the ideal food
for man?
- The most dynamic food is the seed. Inside it there is its
“program”, the potential for the birth of life. This means you mustn’t prevent
this potential from expressing itself. You must let the seed have germs and
roots and then you can eat it. [6]
The seed has primordial enzymes and the intestine is man’s first organ; this
shows that it is most suitable for man. A handful of seeds has the potential of
a forest. The body’s reaction should be the gauge for nutrition: the smell
bringing saliva to your mouth shows a food is suitable for you to eat; when
your mouth waters at the thought of food, it means you are really hungry and it
is time for you to eat, but you should stop before feeling full. While you must
be hungry before you eat, when you are thirsty it’s already late: you should
drink water before you feel thirst. This is important, Alexander, the
organism needs water. When too little water is available, it won’t get it from
the organs, say the heart, but from the bones; that’s why people get shorter as
years go by; they have chronic dehydration. In the morning, 2 – 3 glasses of
water are the most necessary.
- I found impressive what you said about the seeds. Can man not eat
at all?
- Yes, he can get nourishment from the air and the sun, as long as
he doesn’t move.
- That’s awesome! Konstantin, some people refuse to eat meat, they
say we don’t have the right to subtract a life…
- Look at
the food chain. If all the animals were herbivorous, plants would be in danger.
There is balance when carnivorous animals eat the herbivorous ones, the ones
that eat plants. What difference does it make for a sheep whether it gets eaten
by the wolf or by man? It’s food, Alexander, moving food; in a way, an animal
that has not been eaten has not fulfilled its purpose.
- Konstantin, what should one do to
avoid eating too much food; or cut out any bad habit in general?
-A fundamental rule in neurology is
that nerves which get activated together, are also cabled together. If
something happens once, a loose group of nerves will react forming a network
but, if the same behaviour is not repeated, it won’t carve a route in the
brain. When something happens repeatedly, these neuronic cells develop a
connection that grows stronger and stronger, so activation of the specific
network becomes easier. [7]
- So in order to stop a bad habit I
should restrain myself, try hard not to indulge in it for a number of times.
- Exactly.
- And I should put some pressure on
myself so that something which I find right does get started, creating a good
habit.
-Exactly.
Konstantin looked at Alexander’s body which resembled an ancient
Greek statue.
- Do you think you eat too much?
-I sure do, and I also work a lot, but your remark about stopping
before we feel full made me think. I ‘ve never stopped until I felt full… and
then fell asleep like a boa.
- Alexander, the issue for a man is that he thinks. By applying this
simple rule, he won’t get caught in the pleasure of food; he won’t live in
order to eat. Food is energy, which means that, by eating, you should be able
to recharge your batteries… The need for sleep means that you’ve lost energy
and need a rest, it’s the result of too much eating.
- Konstantin, since I cook most of the times, what are the rules for
cooking?
- Not to cook!
Said Konstantin
and laughed at the surprise on Alexander’s face. Hm! Well then, the rules. The more savory
you cook, the more you’ll eat. The more entangled ingredients you put in, the
more you make it difficult and tiresome for your organism to digest them. The
digestion fluids for plants are produced in the mouth, that’s why it’s
necessary to chew well; proteins are digested in the stomach and fats in the
intestine. So you may eat 3 or 4 kinds of vegetables. Or 3 or 4 kinds of meat.
If, however, you want to eat vegetables and meat, you must eat one kind of
each.
- Say! How wrong have I been cooking! That’s why they say that God provides the food and devil the cook!
- Alexander, let me ask you something, too. Which is the food that
God cooks?
- Does God cook?
- Yes, there
is something that cooks itself naturally, as if God made it.
Alexander stayed silent for a
while.
- No! I cannot imagine it, he said moving his head.
- Pickles!
Alexander remembered all those vases which Konstantin prepared in
the kitchen and the Chemist who told him one day: “Konstantin has never cooked
but what the hell, he makes fantastic pickles!”
- Why pickles?
- If you put together vegetables and water, the fermentation goes on
by itself and it’s ready after 4-5 days; God’s cooking.
Alexander found the phrase touching, let alone that pickles was a
relish he didn’t want to have to do without; already at the thought his mouth
watered.
- Konstantin, how can we have pickles up on the surface? How can we
go about it?
- Pickles are an excellent food; the juice is full of enzymes, ideal
for digestion; whoever has digestion problems can take 2-3 sips and digest. The
way to prepare them is what I already told you; you put carrots, peppers,
cabbage, garlic, then cover with water and leave it there.
- Don’t you put salt?
- No, it gets sour by itself. Hmmm…. He stopped for a moment and then nodded. Yes! We need a concave rock with an opening thought which remains
can leave, and a schistolithic plate as a cover… But it should not be inside the cave; smell will
tempt everybody to eat.
- Oh God! And how shall we transport water? Asked Alexander uneasily. I hadn’t thought of this problem, it
dawned on me just now.
- By making cones out of leaves,
said Konstantin laughing. For the beginning. Let the children find other ways.
- Such as?...
- Such as….
- Oh, don’t tell me, I got it. With a half shell of water melon!
When they got to working at the salt pits they brought with them the
fish. In the aquarium they had lobsters and shrimps, breams, sardines and
mussels. They moved some rocks and blocked two-thirds of a little bay in the
shape of a horse-shoe. They threw in lots of food, half the fish of each kind
and wished them luck. They hoped that
life had been preserved in deep sea.
Konstantin had gone out for the decisive inspection; if he deemed
that PHOENIX
was running fine up to this point, they would begin fertilization of the
ovules.
Everybody followed by his heels, even the President who was feeling
more positive by now. Near the entrance, there were the newborn animals. They
were of three kinds only, hens, lamps and pigs. The chain had broken but the
damage was not irreparable. Nature would find its way, the only thing it needed
was time.
The animals grew fast, they were lively and very healthy. They would
transport them in their area when the plants would have multiplied and there
would be plenty of food. Konstantin said “fine” and some of the people
following him applauded enthusiastically. They crowded in the vehicle, some
climbing on its roof or simply around it and took off into the animals area .
The Agriculturist had ample provisions in plants and seeds. The
greenhouse was full of little fruit-bearing trees; they were small, since
artificial light didn’t help in their growth, but there was quite The
Agriculturist had ample provisions in plants and seeds. The greenhouse was full
of little fruit-bearing trees; they were small, since artificial light didn’t help
in their growth, but there was quite a variety of them. All were cultivated
traditionally, with water and manure because the President did not want
pesticides and hybrids in his plate. When they had moved them on the surface,
they had protected them for some days with dark colored shades, so that they
could adapt to sunlight.
The animals area was surrounded by hills and one should come near it to see it. At
the narrowest part of the river they had made a bridge with ropes and planks
which they would remove when they would relocate the animals. The sown earth
and the appropriate soil was about one kilometer wide; the plants would grow
there thus keeping the animals around. The river constituted one more barrier.
- Konstantin, if the two areas were
near each other, the children could get milk and eggs every day… now they must
be quite grown up before they manage to reach this place. Why have you chosen
the two areas to be so far apart? The Environmentalist
had asked.
- Their benefit will be greater this way.
- In what sense?
- It’ll take them longer to discover fear.
They were once more impressed with his thinking but only Alexander
realized that he didn’t mean the fear a child can feel for an animal it
encounters for the first time; he meant the fear of death. Alexander was
overwhelmed: the children wouldn’t know the fear of death for some years! They’d feel immortal!
Now the animals area resembled an oasis in the desert. The young plants made out clusters leaving
an open space near the entrance. Various fruit trees, olive tree and others
would secure food for every season of the year, and there were also the three
fir trees they had adorned each Christmas in Oneiroupolis. Eatable bulbs and
annual plants were placed in the inner part of the horseshoe shaped brook .
Furrows crossed the ground and slate stones blocked the two ends. Alexander had
only to lift one stone for a specific area to flood. He could water the area
easily and in a controlled way, according to the needs of every group of
plants. The Agriculturist had planted rosebushes, lilacs and jasmines, the
plants he had carried in Oneiroupolis for his personal pleasure, next to the
entrance of the cave.
- Fine, said Konstantin and made his way to the cave.
They had dug and blown up some rocks, creating a space which could
host about 30 persons. They had deepened an area of about 4 square meters and
then filled it up with sand. The children would sleep on it. There was a place
where they had left a lot of planks which could be used for fire the first
year; then the trees would be big enough for the children to get wood out of
them and Konstantin hoped they’d forget the planks.
- Fine, said the Biologist, we can start.
- Just a moment, cried Mary interrupting the celebrations.
Konstantin, I want to say some of my thoughts.
- Go ahead, he encouraged her kindly.
- Konstantin, I’d like to have my children near me, not lose them as
soon as they reach six months of age, I want to be their mother, not just a…
bottle that feeds them, but I realize they are first children of this earth and
then ours. I understand why they must have nothing of our civilization, so they
can create their own objects that respond to their own needs without having to
ask what happened to whoever made them. But us, Konstantin? What shall we do in
the remaining 20 or 30 years of our lives? It hurts to remember the past and we
don’t have a future, so how shall we go on living every day? What will keep us
off paranoia?
From the attitude of the others it was clear that they had made the
same thoughts and felt the same way.
- Konstantin, I need to see them. I want us to place cameras up
here.
A few seconds were enough for them to imagine their children run,
play, laugh, climb up the trees, swim, grow up and them being able to see them…
“Yes, cameras”, they shouted, some of them beseeching, others
demanding.
- We’ll be able to see them but they won’t see us; observing them
won’t be interfering, said the Dentist woman? ardently.
- Fine, said Konstantin.
WHEN MARY AS A GIRL talked to her dolls, she used to tell them that
she’d be a doctor when she grew up, and have many children. What will become of
us, they asked her. I’ll always keep you with me, she reassured them…
She had brought her dolls with her, along with her books, when she
had come to Oneiroupolis, placing them mainly at her pillow head. She looked at
them now and felt a desperate urge to fulfill the second part of her girlish
dream. She wanted a child of her own. She couldn’t stand the idea that, inside
her womb, there would grow a child with only one to eight probabilities to be
hers, a child whose father would remain unkown.
She understood Konstantin’s logic. A chance sperm would fertilize a chance ovule. With in vitro fertilization, all women would give birth, maybe even
to twins. The newly born would be at the jurisdiction of Konstantin and
Alexander. In this way everybody would feel their involvement but they wouldn’t
know which child they had fathered; the children would really be everybody’s
children. Parting with them would also be easier, shone a thought in her. But
no, she would give birth to a child that would be part of her and with a
special father. She would remain pregnant first and she would hide her
pregnancy. She would make her revolt, even if parting would then be more
difficult. She could then see her child grow…
She took her bath with special care and put on a short red dress,
wearing over it her unbuttoned doctor’s apron. She let her hair loose and
looked at the perfume bottle. Konstantin had explained to them that perfumes
are chemical smells whose frequencies the liver elaborates with difficulty;
today, however, she would do the mistake. She put two drops of perfume at the root
of her hair, behind the ears. She was ready to seduce the father of her child.
She walked to his room and, since she knew his schedule, she was sure he would
be sleeping at that moment. “I’ll catch him in his sleep”, she thought and
smiled. She knocked on the door and, when he saw him in front of her she
flustered...
- Mary? What a nice surprise!
- Hi, Alexander, I was passing by and thought of saying hello…
- Hello, said the young man surprised, making her blush with her
silly lie.
- Hello, she answered embarrassed
- Hello, the voice of Konstantin came also from inside the room.
- Hello Konstantin, said Mary and was ready to run away.
Finally Alexander threw the door wide open.
-Please come in…
The love and wisdom on the Biologist’s eyes made her feel guilty
about her enterprise; when, however, having caught the perfume in the air and
thrown a glance at her red dress, he discreetly left the room, the need
that’d brought her there prevailed. She
avoided Alexander’s eyes, looking around instead. “Oh God, what do I do now?” she
thought.
- Would you like some juice? He asked her warmly.
- Yes, please, I’ll have some.
Alexander opened the small fridge and took out a bowl with freshly cut fruit. He
threw it in the juicer and pressed the button.
- It’s either juice therapy or chemo
therapy, he joked.
He was wearing only the sweat pant she had given him. Manual labor
had shaped his body and the back she was looking at as he was pouring the juice
for her was the back of a strong man. The image of the young boy she had seen 7
years earlier came to her mind and tenderness overcame her embarrassment. He
was her sweetheart boy. She approached him from behind and embraced him.
He was putting his face in the black torrent of her hair; he touched
and kissed every pore of her body with an almost metaphysical eagerness, as if
he wanted to imprint every detail of her in his mind; he made love to her as if
the whole humanity was guiding him to it; he gave her all his soul, all his
substance, but not his sperm…
She got up feeling tired and put her clothes back on. She didn’t
tell him anything neither did he ask her. She understood he wasn’t her boy
anymore. He had been won over by Konstantin… and logic. She left disappointed.
DIALOGUE 12. LOVE, VIOLATION, RELATIONSHIPS
- Konstantin, can both man and woman arrive at deification?
- Yes, each one by his or her role. The role of the Woman is
motherhood, she has to have children, many of them. Look, Alexander, how Nature
takes care of a mother. When a woman is pregnant, there are cells from the
embryo which go to every organ of the mother and which are able to survive up
to a decade. What do we make of this? That with every pregnancy the woman gains
in health and that nature secures her so that she’ll be able to raise her child
until it can make it on its own. So when a woman has one child, she
distinguishes it and her love is confined to it. But when she has 10 children,
she learns to split her love between all ten, she has no obstacles towards
loving even 15 or 20 children, provided she loves Children; she has
possibilities to arrive at loving and offering to humanity. The role of man is
to “understand”. The more “I understand” he can pronounce, the more he rises
spiritually, having thus probabilities to arrive at givingness.
- I understand, said Alexander smiling. That’s why there haven’t
been so many women philosophers: they don’t have to think; according to their
role, every child they have is a corresponding, strong “I understand” of men.
- Right, they need to think as much as to tell apart, say, milk from
lime.
- But what if a woman doesn’t have any children? Or if she has a
few.
- Then she can use the path of “I understand”.
- Are men and women also different in love?
- The audacity of men and the beauty of women are spiritual entities
of equal status. A man falls in love with the beauty and the femininity in a
woman. He only has to see and fall in love. A woman falls in love with the
audacity, the daring in a man; she has to perceive in order to fall in love. Love
makes a human happy, able to stand the biggest problems, even illness when in love. It
can be compared to the happiness one experiences when “understanding”. The
problem is that love for another person soon ends, while love for “I
understand” is permanent.
- How is love lost?
- Alexander, there are research results which show that passion
between a couple lasts two years at most [8]. Two years at most! Look how
serious conclusions we can draw from this. First conclusion. Nature doesn’t
need more for her job to be done. If there is no child in this time-span, it
makes you want to end; another love may produce a child. And a second conclusion. Nature wants variety. If two
people have had a child, that’s enough, Nature sends you on your way to another
combination. Most marriages last 7 years, not because the couple is in love but
in order that a child grows a little. This has been going on for thousands of
years. The child stayed with its parents up to this age and then it belonged to
the tribe. This is still present in our brain. Love is lost for various
reasons. As long as the woman conserves her beauty and femininity, the man is
in love with her. For a woman, though, things are different. Let’s say that she
has fallen in love with a man who has level “A” of daring. She has fallen in
love, she has known him, it’s over. Now this man must go a level up in daring;
so she falls in love with him again at level “B”. When she has known him there,
she wants him still more daring… and more daring…. She wants to fall in love
with a God. It’s God she wants to reach.
Alexander wondered what dirty businesses of men might have to do
with God. He, himself, had experienced a wonderful love only a little while
before this conversation, but still…
- When I was there, a cook used to call us “children of love”. I
guess she didn’t want to remind us that we had been abandoned, children of
unknown parents or orphans and preferred to put it more poetically. All this
unhappiness in and around me made me combine love with misfortune. In every man
or woman that I saw I searched for similarities with me, hoping to find my
parents. A friend, older than me, took me down to earth. “Don’t look at
well-dressed and serious people, you fool, they do not abandon their children;
look rather for some bump or drunken woman, your parents must be scum!” I
couldn’t stand this version, so I tried to save at least one of my parents.
“Maybe my mother was a good woman… and somehow she got raped”. “This still
would make you scum”, he answered wryly. A scum, repeated Alexander in a low
voice; his eyes filled with tears and he lowered his head.
Konstantin made a move to touch him but he stopped. He should rather
speak to him.
- When a man and a woman make love, Nature expresses itself through them; God. Can
there be anything dirty in this?
Alexander sat up astonished in his chair. When he was in orphanage, although he didn’t want and neither liked
it, he had convinced himself to combine carnal love with sin in his mind. Now
Konstantin, with this simple phrase, had come to upset this.
- I guess not, he answered to Konstantin’s question. But sometimes
people make it dirty; rape, for example, is a dirty action.
- Look, Alexander. Say that we have a couple falling in love,
marrying and having a child according to all the norms of society. And say we
also have another child, born after a rape. What difference is there for Nature
between one child and the other?
- I can’t say for Nature, but it does make a difference for society.
- There is no difference for Nature; the result tells us about the
beginning. And the result shows that Nature doesn’t see any mistake; she
doesn’t see a “rape”.
- Doesn’t see a rape? But the woman has been really raped, uttered
Alexander shocked… Ok, let’s say that a man can immediately function sexually
since it is in his Nature to see and feel attracted. A woman, however, needs
time; see needs, in a way, to hearken before being conquered so, according to
her Nature, she is right to resist. If the way man functions is right, there is
no rape. If, however, the way a woman functions is right, then there sure is a
rape. Has God made a mistake?... Cause
something is wrong here… There is no right timing…. I don’t like it…
- Your observation is right. Since a woman does not want and the man
does, there is no timing. But this is happening today. Look back in the era in
which man was a hunter. Then a woman saw the audacity of a man, she recognized
the bold hunter, she was in love with his image and she must always have been
ready for love. Right timing was there. Pay attention. Alexander, this is serious. If men were wise, women would simply
obey, they wouldn’t have a character of their own. By not succeeding to be
savant, man has compelled women to think, which does not become their role. By
thinking, woman has contested man, she has lost her respect towards his image
and, inevitably, she has lost the happiness of love as a condition. Rape is not
the best expression of Love, but it is an expression of Love. God is Life, he
wants children, he wants Love; man wants the love and woman should want it as
strongly as he does. If she does not, it’s of little consequence for nature;
what’s important for nature is the existence of the Species. In reality Nature
expresses itself, Love expresses itself through them. Nature does not see a
rape and no woman is dirty after such an intercourse, because it isn’t even a
personal matter.
Alexander remained silent for a
while; he needed to digest what he had just heart.
- But, Konstantin, after a … “hasty”
intercourse, a child could be born, most probably unwanted by its parents; is
the unhappiness of this child of no importance to nature?
- Why should the child be unhappy?
Alexander looked at him surprised.
-But certainly, he has no reason to feel like scum, he said with a
bright smile. He is not scum, he whispered relieved. But does nature not see
how painful it is for him not to have been loved, to have been abandoned by its
parents?
- What responsibility do they have?
- What responsibility they have? I don’t see what you mean.
- The matter is not personal. Love has been expressed, Nature is
being expressed through them, they could only succumb to this fact, why should
they be held responsible?
Alexander looked at him, shocked.
- Nature, God has been expressed, Alexander. Those two were simply
the means that made the child appear in life. God is its parent. It is not by
chance that no child can imagine its parents having sex, it loathes this
thought. It’s like its being would say “why do you tell me that I come from
that?” Indeed it comes from That which made those two succumb to it.
The loneliness, the hatred and the malice that for so many years he
had felt about the parents who had abandoned him, were erased. Tears of relief
shone in his eyes.
- Thanks, he whispered with gratitude.
Konstantin let him calm down before he spoke.
- Observe Nature. Animals raise their offspring for some time and
then this relation is lost. The kid belongs to the pack, the pack is
responsible for it. Men used to function likewise. The primitives lived in
small societies, had open relationships and society undertook to make hunters
and mothers out of their children. This went on for thousands of years, unlike
marriage which exists for the last 2 or 3 thousand years. This is how we went
on as species, with open relationships. However the population growth, the
creation of cities, and wars, made the responsibility of the society disappear.
In order to conserve itself, and to secure its children-“cogwheels”, society
came up with marriage. Jesus blessed it. It’s like he said: “since you risk
when you live freely, you can marry”. Faith kept the family ties; when the man
loves God and the woman loves God, doesn’t it come natural that love should
exist also between them? But faith has been lost, along with the family.
- But children look like their parents; why should this happen when
parents have no responsibility?
- The relation is biological, Alexander; the Law of Economy operates
here. Why should Nature look for a new form when she already has two of them?
- In other words a child owes its parents nothing!
- In nature there really is only the notion of the mother. A man
can’t know how many children he has; a woman knows. The mother loves and cares
for her child; if the father takes part in it, so much the better. What a child
owes to its parents, has to do with the gratification it feels about them. If
there is no gratification, if they don’t mean anything for the child, it does
not owe them anything. But it can also be that the gratification about the
parents is so great that a child feels that they deserve more than anything he
or she is doing for them.
Alexander wanted to ask one more thing, but he was afraid it might
offend his Teacher.
- Konstantin, does the Spiritual Man make love? He asked hesitantly.
- It is similarly easy for him to make love or not. But the more spiritual he is, the stronger he experiences love.
- Can a man feel sexual attraction for another man?
- He can feel spiritual
attraction, appreciation, respect, inspiration but sexual attraction no. It is
a mistake, an illness. Homosexuality doesn’t serve in anything in nature.
- But they don’t look ill, Konstantin. I used to know someone who
was homosexual and he didn’t seem to be ill. Why is that so?
- The mistakes a human makes are expressed more directly the nearer
he is to his role. When your mistake becomes an illness, it also becomes your
chance to save yourself. It rings a bell, it says “Be careful”! When you are
far away from your role, you don’t receive any warning.
- How can a homosexual be cured?
- As with all illnesses, Alexander. Respiration, right diet and
motion secure 20% of your health. The remaining 80% is right thinking. Right
conclusions.
- As much as that?
- As much as that. The body exists so that the brain can think.
- Konstantin, there have always been homosexual people but in our
times they were more numerous; why did this happen?
- Feminine gender represents the conditions of birth. These
conditions are the spectrum in which a child appears, for example between 500
grams and 4+ kilograms. So feminine is stronger than masculine; any problem,
any illness which befalls humanity, first appears in men. Plastic and aluminum
are extremely harmful for the organism, but most alimentary goods come in plastic
or aluminum containers. The consequences are expressed upon hormones and the
nervous system. Feminization of the population is the result of this specific
invention of society.
- I understand… Konstantin, why is there love between people with a
large difference of age?
- Alexander, beauty meets daring, and daring has no age. A man can
fall in love with a young girl because his daring makes him see her femininity;
his daring gives him the right to want a proportionate femininity. A young
girl, too, may fall in love with the daring, confident, active man.
- But a woman, too, can fall in love with a man younger than her!
- It’s logical that this can happen too. When a woman looks around
her but doesn’t see daring, doesn’t see a hero, she falls in love with motion
and activity which are elements of liveliness.
- Konstantin, I understand that in nature there is no matrimony, so
there shouldn’t be a question of infidelity. Still, society practices marriage;
is infidelity perceived in a similar way by both men and women?
- For things we don’t encounter in nature but do exist in society,
philosophy has to adapt. The nature of man’s need to conquer. To conquer
material possessions, ideas and… women. A happy and healthy man will be him who
will pass one day of the week in his family and the remaining 6 in conquest. It
doesn’t matter whether the other women are prettier than his wife; it is enough
that other women are pretty and he expresses his nature by conquering them. If
his wife can understand this and not interfere in this need of his, then their
relation will be good. The woman has the right to use any kind of cunning or
tricks to secure his companionship, his preference. She can try to renew
herself every day, being the new woman that has husband-hunter will be provoked
to conquer, changing her dress every day, said Konstantin laughing.
A woman has the right to do
anything, except being unfaithful. A woman’s infidelity is a shock for a man
because it shatters the image of a Woman in his mind. The loose of one
recipient of his daring is like clipping his wings.
- After all, Konstantin, taking into consideration the feminization
of the population, if men were not polygamous, redundant women would be
condemned to remain undersexed and childless.
- That’s right.
Alexander remained motionless for a while; then a thought hit him.
- But, Konstantin, this isn’t logical. It isn’t logical for a man to
become hero on one hand and die for a woman on the other. If his role is to arrive at givingness for the Species,
one woman and one family is too little!
- Bravo, Alexander, said Konstantin
with satisfaction. Your observation’s right. While man should have liberty of
mind, he gets married. While he should be Man and father of Men, he becomes a
father. Love may be death for a man; a love that keeps him in the frame of his
family, stands in his way as far as development and offer are concerned,
impeding him to reach immortality; so it means death for him.
- But, Konstantin, if the issue for
a man is his ability to think, why has he feelings, too?
- Because he is entitled to joy.
Since he appeared regardless of his wish, he is entitled to rejoice; it’s his
reward for what he does. He shouldn’t however confine himself to feelings
alone; his potential for thought shows that he should think.
- I understand; the feelings must be
controlled so that they don’t impede a man from thinking, from developing…. I
guess only a demented person cannot develop.
- That’s right. Pay attention,
Alexander. They say that “out of the mouth of babes and
the crazy comes the truth”. (Translator’s note: Greek
proverb). This doesn’t mean that a crazy person has
some truth to tell but that, by observing him, you can understand a truth. What
do you think, could men make love with a crazy woman?
-Well, yes, said Alexander and he blushed
feeling guilty.
- So it is; men don’t care about the
spirituality of a woman, about how clever she is. It is enough for them that
she be pretty. So men can go to bed with a crazy woman. Now, do you think that
women could similarly go to bed with a crazy man?
- No, I don’t think so…
- In fact, women are attracted by
persons who can give them certainty, who could protect them and their child; so
women wouldn’t go to bed with a demented person. Pay attention to the
conclusions, to the truths that we can draw from these observations. Nature
speaks through men and women, she manifests what she wants. Through women’s
behaviour she indicates that she demands thoughts from men, while through men’s
behaviour she indicates that she has no such claim from women.
- Konstantin, why do problems appear in man-woman relationships? Why
do some people manage to have long-term relationships and others don’t?
- Alexander, there is no notion of what we call a bond in nature. A
bond ties people up; if living things had bonds, then when one of them were in
peril, the other would be in peril too. You understand that this is very
dangerous. What really is there in nature is
relationships, that is
collaboration and a common course for mutual benefit. Thus, a man and a woman
can have only relationships. When a relationship becomes a bond, then there
sure will be problems. Problems can also arise because a man and a woman
perceive the relationship differently.
- Meaning?
- Woman is “conditions of birth”; motherhood is love, so from her
nature a woman is relationship, relationship with her child and with the man
who has inspired her love so that this love materializes. So the woman has a
relationship with the man. The nature of a man drives him to comprehend; this
is the issue for him. Now
look how subtle it is. Whatever averts, whatever
impedes the man from comprehending is harmful for him. Love, as a software,
secures nature; we can say it’s good for nature that people should fall in
love, since in this way the protective umbrella will go on existing. However,
love, on a personal level and personally for men, is an obstacle… So man,
through love, is forced to create a relationship. Notice the subtle difference:
a woman has a relationship, a man makes one.
- Oh! I understand… So the duration of a relationship depends more
on how the woman will handle it. That’s why you said before that she fights so
as to secure his preference.
- Exactly.
- Konstantin,
are there taboos in love? If the issue for Nature is the child, then why
is it that people are not attracted only, say,… by the genital parts?
- And would everything else be there in vain? Asked Konstantin
smiling widely. Look, Alexander, Nature works by economy: every part of the
woman, every inch of her body must become a cause, a chance for love to be
there and, with love, for a child to be there. Thus whatever attracts is good,
whatever a man and a woman do is good. But when we say that they make love we
are not precise, in reality love occurs, they obey to love, they cannot but
have intercourse, it’s beyond them. So in this act there are three players: the
need for love, in other words God, the man and the woman. If this had stayed
strictly this way, people wouldn’t have taboos. Love, however, has passed into
common view becoming evident also to others; so differing opinions created
taboos.
- I understand…. Konstantin, sometimes society is strict, especially
with women; they say for example “this woman has a past” and they mean many
love partners; is it bad for a woman to have had various partners? After all
nature itself, hormones – wise, makes you stay in love for two years at most.
- Alexander, this is a subtle matter… Beauty is attracted by
audacity. If we look at it from the point of view of the audacity, a man sees
around him a lot of beauty; let’s say that there are a lot of beautiful women around.
It’s natural for him to have been with many women, so a “past” is expected. For
a woman it’s different. Beauty must meet audacity. The rule is strict and women
apply it according to their conscience. It is probable that a conscientious
woman, one with, let’s say, respect for herself, will never go to bed with a
man; not if she hasn’t met audacity, if she hasn’t found her hero. If she does
find her hero, then again she may be in love with him without ever making love
with him. It’s a consequence of the Law. In society, audacity is expressed as
action, so for a woman a daring man is an active man; a scoundrel, in a prison,
may receive hundreds of letters from women who are in love with him. It seems
crazy; they know they may never meet him and that his actions have been, say,
negative, but they are in
love with him. Why is that? Because they have seen audacity in him.
A revolutionary may also inspire millions of women who may fall in love with
him. Why? Because they see audacity in him. You realize, then, that it’s of no
consequence how many lovers a woman has had; what matters is whether these men
have been the expression of her conscience.
- I understand. Konstantin, I am thinking about sexual intercourse
in animals. Animals have periods of estrus... Salmons and other animal species
travel thousands of kilometers to return where they were born and bear their
offspring there… What does all this mean?
- Right
observation. Animals have time and space while man can make love anywhere and
anytime. This means that man is not determined by space nor time; man is beyond space and time, which shows that
he is not a child of this earth, that he has come from somewhere else.
- Ah! As a
sphere! But, Konstantin, I’ve
read that dolphins and monkeys also have sex whenever they want to; does it
mean that they are also independent of space and time?
- Alexander, we can say that something is the result of a Law and
Rule even when it happens in a small percentage, say 3%. In lower percentages
it is random, it occurs because there are probabilities of it occuring. What
percentage do you think dolphins and monkeys represent in animal kingdom?
- Zero point zero zero… Ok, forget it….
KONSTANTIN WANTED the children to be born in spring, for better
climatic adjustment, so they made the embryo transfer in August. Pregnancy was
astonishingly normal in all women and three of them managed to carry twins.
- Good crop,
said the Agriculturist; 15 children!
Since they were not very young, the women would deliver with a
cesarean, but Alexander should practice helping in a normal delivery to gain
experience for the future; Mary, being the youngest, was planned for a natural
delivery.
When the day came, they carried everything necessary on the surface,
near the entrance. They sat at a discreet distance around the surgical bed;
they all wanted to be present at this moment and they also wanted to keep
animals away. The Gynecologist would have the Anesthetist and Alexander as
helpers. When all three of them were ready, the Microbiologist approached and
sat on the bed.
- I hope to
see you again in a while, she said a bit uneasily.
- We’ll be
here waiting for you, answered Konstantin in a steady voice.
The woman felt better, smiled and lay down on the bed. The
Anesthetist took her respirator off, and put the mask of light anesthesia on
her face. He asked her to start counting and, when she stopped, he applied the
anesthesia shot. A few minutes later
the Gynecologist took a
little girl in his arms. He held it up, so that everybody could see it while
the umbilical cord kept the two bodies united. There, amidst the hoorah, the Environmentalist fainted,
collapsing on the Chemist.
- You chicken! said the Chemist and slapped him for having scared
him and ruined the big moment.
The Gynecologist cut and tied the umbilical cord. It was the most
important moment; the baby would take its first, decisive breath which would
make it a resident of the upper world. He took it by the feet, raised it, but
it did not react; he slapped it lightly on its back but it didn’t cry; he
looked alarmed at Konstantin who was approaching and laid the baby on its
mother’s chest. He grasped his oxygen mask and was about to place it on the
baby’s face but Konstantin stopped his hand.
- Look, he
said pointing at the blood-covered little belly.
It was rising and falling imperceptibly. The baby was breathing.
- Fine, said
Konstantin.
The Gynecologist put the mask back on his face and took a deep
breath of oxygen and relief. Now he’d close the incision. He took the newly
born and gave it to Konstantin. Looking at the happy faces of the others,
Konstantin walked to the President and stood in front of him. After all, it was
him who had saved them. He put the baby in his arms.
- We thank
you, President… he said simply and sincerely.
- Thanks, he
whispered and for the first time in his life he shed tears of emotion.
They had a delivery every day. At the third pair of twins, they
noticed with grief that one of the girls was too small and had a problem in one
of her legs. Konstantin thought that she’d need special care and Alexander
would not be able to cope, having 14 more kids.
- We’ll have
a future, he said.
They looked at him in surprise.
- My
replacement, cried Alexander. Here is the 58th resident of
Oneiroupolis, he said, pointing at her with both hands.
They looked at each other for some seconds and then broke out in a
huge scream of triumph. A child would remain with them! They would have a
future!
The Gynecologist approached the incubator to put the baby inside but
Konstantin stopped him. He took the little girl and gave it to the Dentist,
telling her to carry it down.
- Not in the incubator, he said
to the surprised Gynecologist.
DIALOGUE 13 – HEALTH,
CELL, CANCER
- Konstantin,
why didn’t you let the Gynecologist put the little girl in the incubator?
- I’ll tell
you the mistakes people made as far as the incubator is concerned. In the womb,
in the amniotic fluid, the embryo has 7% of carbon dioxide and 2% of oxygen in
its lungs. You understand what a shock it is when it comes out in the
atmosphere, which has 0,03% of carbon dioxide and 21% of oxygen. Can you
imagine, Alexander, how disastrous the incubator is for the organism, with
0,03% of carbon dioxide and 50-60% of oxygen?
- That much?
An ideal place to burn a candle.
- Exactly.
Oxygen means combustion.
- Oh, I just remembered something! There was
this mother dog at the orphanage, often giving birth in a quiet corner. I
remember her litter, how the puppies were trying to snuggle under her body; I
realize now that they wanted to cover their noses, they were trying to take
lesser breath!
- In old times, mothers swaddled
their babies and they immediately calmed down and slept because they were
taking more shallow breaths. It’s for the same reason that children sleep in a
prone position and cover one of their nostrils. They suffocate with too much
oxygen and they try to breathe.
- It’s like when you walk into the wind
that is blowing hard at you; you can’t breathe…
- Exactly.
- What would happen, Konstantin, if
carbon dioxide would be still lower, say, if it dropped to 0,01%?
- There would be no life; plants
would be destroyed first since they could not breathe and get nourishment, then
animals would follow for lack of food and finally people.
- And how did it climb to 5% all of a sudden?
- Surely because of volcanoes; volcanoes have large quantities of
carbon dioxide and there must have been many eruptions.
- Why have humans done so many mistakes about the carbon dioxide and
health issues?
- Is it logical to say that whatever is good for the “beast” is bad
for humanity and what’s good for humanity is bad for the “beast”?
- Certainly, they have opposite interests.
- The “beast” wants humans to err, it lives by their mistakes.
Mistakes have passed from generation to generation through the simplest way,
hypnotism brought about by habit. However every now and then someone wakes up.
Someone understands the value of carbon dioxide and the holding of breath,
someone understands the value of cholesterol, [9] someone understands that vaccines are drops of death, [10] someone understands that milk [11] must be consumed by humans only
when they are babies and only if it is mother’s milk.
- Don’t they observe that no animal in nature drinks milk when it
grows up, or that its mother stops producing milk when it’s no longer needed?
And in what do teeth serve? Αre
they there only for looks?
- Right. Someone wakes up and says that salt [12] is necessary…
- Especially about salt, Konstantin, men should have perceived its
importance centuries ago, when Jesus said to his disciples “you are the salt of
the earth”. He wouldn’t have used salt as an example if it were harmful.
- Right. Someone realizes that hypertension is lack of oxygen and,
instead of having exercise, he takes medicines.
- And then medicines [13]. I hope new humanity doesn’t create pharmaceutical
industries; they surely don’t want you dead, since dead people cease to be
customers, but they neither want you healthy because you wouldn’t be a client
either. So what they do? They give you a pill that makes the symptoms subside – since if it had no effect on you,
you’d stop taking it – but they create a health problem somewhere else,
ensuring their clientele.
- Right.
- Konstantin, has a Doctor the right to cure?
- He can interfere in the rule of reward and rejection. He has not
the right to cure, that’s why he cannot cure. Through the ages, doctors have
never cured the cause of an illness, they simply have made symptoms subside.
And this, Alexander, is bad. Let me make an example. When a man breaths in the
right way, gets the right nourishment and engages in motion, he is healthy.
When he doesn’t do so, he is bound to manifest a problem somewhere. Let’s say
in blood vases. They should be clean and strong in order to stand the pressure
of blood. With bad living, the risk that vases break is there; so the organism
protects itself by using cholesterol to reinforce the vases walls. Now the
doctor comes and gives pills to make cholesterol go away, which ends up ruining
the defense of the organism. The symptom subsides, while he should have
indicated to the patient what he could do to cure the cause. They say illness
is the visit of God. Do you understand what this means?
Alexander thought for a while
- Man is born healthy. He makes mistakes as far as his body is concerned, he makes wrong
thoughts and problems start. Man can make mistakes, but he has not the right to
live by them. By heaping up problems, he gets ill. Illness becomes a good
opportunity for him to think, consider his mistakes, humble himself. By
thinking, it is probable that you find what’s right. And, when you find and
apply what’s right, you have the chance to save yourself, to save your Spirit.
That’s why illness is the visit of God, It’s your chance to save yourself.
- Right. So when your doctor gives you pills and the symptoms
subside, what happens?
- A man stops worrying. He loses his chance to save himself; he is a
living dead.
- Right. Think now about a sick person approaching death. He is
given pain killers and sleeping pills and he is robed of his last chance for
repentance and salvation.
- Can a man be saved at the last moment?
- Alexander, the biggest criminal, if truly repented, really becomes
another person and, as another person, who hasn’t yet made mistakes, he has the
right to be saved; he doesn’t go to hell. You said before that a man is born
healthy. Does this always happen, Alexander?
- I think it does. There may be complications during pregnancy or
delivery, creating problems for the baby, but they are not the baby’s fault…
- The only illness existing in nature is cancer and no baby is born
with cancer. However, since thought makes up for 80% of health, whatever one
may have, one can think, understand, follow what’s right and get cured.
- But, Konstantin, how can a man in no position to think get cured?
Can a man in a coma be cured? Well, you might tell me it falls into rare cases…
Konstantin nodded approvingly.
- Which are the states of the Intellect?
- To think right, to think wrongly or to not think at all.
- And what is the reward in each condition?
- Well, when one thinks right, the waves one emits are tuned in with
Nature, with Harmony, so this person feels the Harmony, feels good, lives
well. When one thinks wrongly one
disturbs Harmony and must be rejected. When a person does not think at all, he
does not disturb, he can exist. He exists.
- That’s right. With non-thought you are entitled to exist because you don’t
disturb. A person in coma is in a state of non-thought. He is entitled to
exist. His body receives nourishment, so it must have motion. He cannot move,
so others must offer him some movement. They must give him energetic massages. By
non-thought, nourishment and the massage, a person will be cured. Other
peoples’ prayers have a positive contribution, speeding up this process.
-I understand that sleep must have a beneficial effect in the same
way. If you lie down for half an hour and make bad thoughts or are stressed,
you get no rest. If you sleep for five minutes you do get a rest because you
practice non-thought. Konstantin, there must be quite a punishment for what a doctor does.
- No, he does not understand what he does. No-one gets punished if
they don’t understand that what they do is bad, if they leave this life without
remorse. They are good people and they mean well, but look at how many specialties
there are, and each one doctor believes
that he masters his specialty well. But a person isn’t divided in heart, bile,
veins, bones… He is a total and as a total he suffers. He is not independent of
his environment. Nature is not divided in sectors. Why study it in segments? A
doctor tries to unite a puzzle that he himself cuts up in smaller and smaller
pieces. Only the philosopher can unite everything, making the Universe
understood. Then science will become knowledge of God.
- What has a doctor the right to do?
- Prevention; he must show the patient what is right and let him
cure himself. He can also cure fractures. A bone fracture is not a serious
mistake, it is carelessness. The doctor has the right to cure it and that’s why
he does cure in this case.
- Konstantin, you impress me, you always have something nice to say
about people! I was sure you’d speak differently about doctors, but you are
always nice!
The Biologist smiled.
- Is there a question?
- No, no question here, answered Alexander and laughed. I would like
a comment, though.
-Imagine an eight-storey building with a treasure in the loft.
Someone is on the ground floor, another on the third floor and one more on the
seventh. What is their difference if no-one has the treasure?
Alexander stood silent for a while.
- I am afraid, Konstantin, about what’ll happen to the children if I
get ill…
- Have you not understood which is the best treatment for all this?
- Breathing…
The man smiled.
- Breathing, right nourishment, motion, they are all good but not
the best…
Alexander lowered his head and stayed silent for some time.
- I can’t think of what it might be…
- The Law of Action and Reaction is involved. By doing good, your
action, in other words your offer to the others, will trigger the reaction and
this reaction will naturally center where your problem will be, on your
illness. Don’t be afraid, Alexander, you won’t be seriously ill….
- What a fine Law this is! You do good to someone who may never be
in a position to reciprocate but the good, your deed, your action, stays there;
in a way God owes it to you and he repays you when you are in need.
- Exactly. Have you heard the expression “rescued out of the jaws of
death”? It’s the reward for something good this person has done. And the Law
doesn’t work only with actions but also with thoughts. Say, you see someone and
think to yourself “may you keep well… keep well”; the result is that you, too,
will be well. And if, say, you send someone to the
devil, you make this contact first. Sending someone to hell, Alexander, is the
worst thing you can do to yourself because you wish for this person to suffer
the worst, to go to hell, to the devil.
- I understand. Konstantin, do ups and downs in illnesses correspond
to our mistakes? I mean, small mistake to light illness, big mistake to cancer?
- Alexander, man should not die but, reaching the level of Man and
thus securing Paradise, he should consciously
leave his body. When he cannot reach this spiritual level, then the only
illness which he should suffer is cancer. However he does so many mistakes,
that he has created more illnesses, a host of illnesses that kill him before
the onset of cancer.
- What is cancer?
- Alexander, in order to understand what cancer is, you should first
understand what the cell is…
- What is the cell?
The man remained silent for a
while.
- Let’s take it from the beginning. We know that the Universe has an
age of about 15 billion years. Such a duration means that Order does exist. The
existence of Order, in turn, means that there are Laws at work. These Laws are
waves. Every Law has a specific waveform. The Cell is a Law, too. Plants,
animals, humans have cells and there are also free cells in the atmosphere. We
understand that they are a building material, independent from the organism.
This wave may slow down somewhere, say on the mountain of a planet, and break
apart. This part finds itself in the specific conditions of the planet, that is
specific gravity, magnetism, moisture; it attracts various inorganic materials
from the environment and forms a cell. Careful now, the cell has life but not a
role. We have appearance of cells,
multiplication of cells, we have appearance of biomass, forming of leaves, then
grass appears. Plants appeared and what did they do? They took the cosmic
energy, the solar energy and transformed it in glucose.
- Photosynthesis…
- Exactly. In order for the planet to be clean, there appeared the animals
which ate plants and what did they do? They transformed glucose in protein.
Then man appeared, who ate both plants and animals and, in trying to get his
food, he was forced to think. So what did he do? He transformed glucose and
protein into thought, that is in wave, in essence returning the cosmic energy
back to Harmony…
- Oh! This means that, if we wanted to give a definition, Life is
transformation of cosmic energy?
- Life is transformation of the
keeping of Order; a Living being can reproduce itself, it transforms one kind
of energy into another and contributes in the preservation of Order.
- Konstantin, since in order to become a cell the wave of the cell
uses the conditions of various planets, it means that it can be different on
every planet…
- Right. Let’s say that a planet has different gravity, for example
lesser than ours; then, say, thin long needles would be formed and we would say
that this planet has no life but it has: it has long thin needles but we
couldn’t perceive life there. So as long as man, as carrier, lives well, the
cell coexists. If he doesn’t fulfil his role, he doesn’t create the protective
umbrella for the planet and for himself, he becomes a dangerous environment for this
cell. The cell gets crazy, tries to save itself, to go. Be careful, Alexander.
Nature does not have a knife, she doesn’t have another way to expel you. It’s
with cells that she makes you appear, and with cells that she sends you away. So
the person starts feeling exhausted and cancer organises itself but at this
stage it is still curable. With motion, absolute fasting and inspiration, it
retreats.
- What do you mean by absolute
fasting?
- Cancerous cells eat more. So, when
you practise absolute fast, those in bigger need for food will die first.
- Konstantin,
if a person has cancer on earth, it means that he hasn’t fulfilled his role on
Earth; but if he finds himself, say, on the moon, does it mean that his
rejection is not valid there, does it mean that he will be cured from cancer?
- Alexander, people tried to pursue
health, to defeat cancer, to avoid death, but they looked for the answers in
the stars; it is irrational to have a problem here and look for answers
elsewhere. No, Alexander, there is no cure on the moon since a man’s role is
here…
- I understood. Konstantin, is man
fulfilling his role by serving society? Is it his role to serve society?
- Can a slave have two masters?
- Can a slave have two masters?
Muttered Alexander.
- Be careful, Alexander. Man is a
slave of God. He cannot be slave of society too.
- You mean it would be better if
there were no society?
- Exactly. The search for food obliged man to form a group. The person gave strength to the group and the group gave strength to
the person. However, people multiplied to a large extend. They formed society
and got encaged in it, controlled by it. They diverged from nature and natural
laws, formed their own laws, determined ways of behavior; so the person became
a prisoner of society instead of being servant of God. But pay attention,
Alexander, although the idea of society is mistaken, from the moment it got
formed, we shouldn’t in any
way mock and provoke society. We must thank society thrice fold; for having
given birth to us, for having raised us and one more time because we can learn
out of its mistakes. The phrase “your death is my life” does not mean one can
kill in order to live but that, out of the mistakes you have done which led you
to your death, I can learn things so as to live.
- And what about givingness?
Through giving to the others man will reach salvation for himself;
his job is to serve the plants.
Alexander sat up surprised.
- Man servant of the plants?
- He serves what appeared first, by thinking. You can see it in
another way; Alexander, imagine a tree. You can cut it, take its fruits, carve
it, burn it, tear its roots out… it hasn’t the slightest ability to resist nor
even protest, it’s at your mercy to make of it what you want. Being the most
helpless and innocent, do-esn’t it deserve to have the strongest as a
protector, as a servant?
There came in Alexander’s mind the image of a burning tree. It stood
motionless and silent in the flames. And then he cried. He realized the
disaster and cried for it. Nothing felt more defenseless and innocent than a
tree.
NOBODY WANTED to assist to Mary’s delivery. Most out of discretion,
some out of fear.
-Let me know where you want me
to put your chair so you have a good view, the Chemist teased the
Environmentalist.
The woman was lying on the
ground, panting and scared. At the beginning Alexander felt embarrassed but
when the groans and cries started, he concentrated himself on his task with
seriousness and responsibility for her and for forthcoming generations. With
the Gynecologist’s guidance, Alexander completed his mission. “Thanks”, he told
her when he put the baby boy in her arms. She smiled at him wearily and forgave
him; she looked at the little face with worship, impressed it in her soul and
said in a whisper “I will never forget you”.
They constructed two remotely controlled cameras that looked like
olive leaves. They had chips and
crystals with a lifetime of 500 years. The Electronic noted that, if they moved
a lot, their life-span would be shorter. “It’ll be longer than ours”, commented
the Chemist wryly. They placed one in the cave and the other on top of the
hill.
Alexander went to take leave of them but they surprised him. They
had prepared a hearty dinner for his last free night in Oneiroupolis. They
embraced him and hugged him again and again; now that they had learnt to love
all children, they realized that he
was their first child. He was their
firstborn who would be going to restart life as both son and patriarch.
They were crying and laughing, eating and drinking, and no-one
noticed that Alexander ate nothing, as he hadn’t eaten anything during the
previous day. When they started to leave, he took Mary by the hand and walked
her to her room. There, in front of the door, he left her and looked at her.
-Every time your femininity urged you to pass your hand though your
hair, I thought that I had to become better so that you’d like me. I had
identified my life with yours and was imprinting in my mind your every moment
as something precious. Now I have to forget.
Mary embraced him tenderly and kissed him softly on the lips.
- I will remember so as to be able to live…
EVERY EVENING they had used to talk, Alexander posing the questions
and Konstantin answering. Evening upon evening Alexander understood the
mistakes humanity had done to reach unhappiness, illness, madness, death and
disaster.
He understood self therapy, God, Emptiness...
Now he was sure, he was ready.
He looked around him in the room for any pendencies. He had swapped
the floor and dusted. The two pairs of pants, the coat and the two T-shirts the
President had given him were washed and stacked in the closet, his shoes shiny
next to his empty box. All merchandise he had given away during his first days
in Oneiroupolis. He spread oil on his body, rubbed it in and took it off
scraping his body with a knife. He threw cold water on himself and wiped
himself. He felt clean externally and internally. He thanked God for what he
had given him and for what he had experienced.
He lay down, cleaned his mind from every thought and slept.
Some hours later, he knocked on Konstantin’s door.
-I am ready,
he told him.
They looked at each other with emotion. Konstantin reached out and
tenderly touched Alexander’s cheek. The youth felt as if a saint had touched
him. He took the hand, kissed it and soaked it with tears.
- You will
be in my thoughts, my good child.
He wanted to tell him, you are the family I have never had, the
proof that man can be wonderful, my teacher; he wanted to say thanks for all
the things he had understood, tell him how difficult it was to part from him,
tell him I will never forget you, I will always have you on my mind…
He didn’t say anything; what he was about to do, he would do as his
pupil and this said everything.
He raised the booth from one side and stepped inside. The Mechanic
had constructed it out of iron rods and see-through nylon sheets. Its
proportions were one cubic meter and had three holes for three pipes, two for
the supply of carbon dioxide and oxygen and one for urination.
He sat on the mattress and closed his eyes. He would stay in there
for 72 hours, learning to breathe from the start. He closed his eyes and began
to practice breath holding. He had to be concentrated in every inhalation, in every
exhalation. He had to stress his lungs a lot, creating a condition of choking,
breathing the carbon dioxide he had just exhaled…
Konstantin beside him kept watch on him him. Gradually, the oxygen
would wane and he had to supply it. Every six hours he would supply more carbon
dioxide, until the instruments would show that the new atmospheric conditions
had been recreated in the booth. It was an extremely difficult enterprise;
Alexander would need great spiritual and physical strength to impose to himself
endurance in these near-death limits for 72 hours.
Everybody came by to see him. They sat silent next to Konstantin,
fixed their eyes on Alexander and thought he was paying a very dear price for
the right to be Up on the surface. Mary, seeing him sit there as a yogi with
his body contorting from the willful drowning, and reading the indications on
the instruments, was stunned. She admired him for what he had the guts to do,
she was jealous of him for doing it and she mourned for him as a living dead because
she would lose him for ever.
72 hour on the limits of death! He had not opened his eyes, he had
not moved…
- What a
guy! He did it, said the Chemist.
Everybody gathered outside his door and along the path he had to
follow to arrive at the elevator. They knew he couldn’t talk to them; it was
better to arrive on the surface with the last breath he would take into the
booth. He had no breath for talking.
- Alexander, said Konstantin in a low voice. You are ready my child,
you can go.
He opened his eyes and looked at him. He slowly unfurled himself,
raised the booth and came out. Konstantin opened the door for him.
- Farewell…
He started walking carefully because he shouldn’t pant. He headed
for the elevator under the sound of clapping hands and wishes. He arrived up on
the surface and breathed freely… His world! He had earned it.
His joy was immediately lost.
Man can be liberated but he is not free; he is bound by his need to
liberate the others, too.
The security responsible waited with the mini bus. They looked at
each other and drove towards the cave. The mothers were there, had breastfed
their children for the last time and were imprinting them in their minds as
they were sleeping on the sand by the fire. At the sound of the vehicle, they
felt like fainting. They sat up and, with tears in their eyes, they came out.
Mary embraced Alexander and immediately let go of him. All the women
stepped into the vehicle and waited for the security responsible who would
transport them in their under world for ever.
Alexander surveyed the area. There was fresh food for himself and
the babies for quite a few days, since he should be careful about his moves
until his organism would have adapted satisfactorily; there was smoked meat,
planks and some branches, the “stones” and cotton. Everything was OK, he nodded
to the Security responsible.
- Your clothes, whispered the man.
Alexander took his pants off and handed them to him.
- Good luck and what can I say? You’ve got big balls!
As he watched him go he thought with a smile
that this phrase was the last he heard
from that civilization.
from that civilization.
Chapter 2
Alexander buried his hands in the sand and
took out a stone. It was cold. He dug the rest of them up and put them to scorch around the fire. He
dug puddles in a circle upon the sand and, using two cold stones, moved the hot
ones there. He covered them and looked at the children. He took them two by two
and sat them down. He had noticed that lately they sat more and more seldom on
the sand. On their feet, or crawling, they explored the cave and, when they
wanted to rest, they sat on the ground. They never approached the fire.
“Are they warm?” he wondered. He gave them
some oranges to play with and paused to observe them. In a while the children took the oranges and
left the sand. Alexander put his hands on it; it was warm.
“They are warm!” he thought with satisfaction.
He would use the warm stones only for the night, when the children slept for
many hours on end and the temperature dropped. If they bothered them, he’d stop
using them.
Since they had been 40 days old, he had tried
to excite their curiosity and interest. He rolled fruit on their little bodies,
he touched them with vegetables, he put flowers underneath their noses, touched
their tongues with various tastes, made colored groups of fruit, smiled and
clapped his hands in sign of joy…. He didn’t speak to them though, he didn’t
produce any sound. The language was to be their own creation.
To make sure he didn’t forget any child in
whatever he had to do for them, he used the sequence in which they had been
born. He started with girl ‘1’ and finished
with boy ‘14’. Several times a day he took them
to the creek to drink water, one by one; he made a cup out of his hand and they
drank. Then he immersed them up to their necks, then used his hands to brush
most water away and leaned then on his chest to dry. They weren’t annoyed; they
made happy voices, moved their little legs and looked inquisitively around.
He used to grind their food on a wide rock
with a stone. They said <taktak>; they understood they were going to eat and watched him with interest
as he didn’t pump them up with food. Their teeth were his quantity indicator;
he increased the dose at every new tooth. One day he’d feed them fruit and
vegetables, and the other baked bulbs and smoked meat; then he added some salt
too. At a certain point he noticed with surprise that they ate soil, too.
Alexander didn’t stop them. He should give them some fresh meat shortly.
Boy ‘3’ was grumbling a lot today. Alexander noticed his saliva was dripping.
“Tooth”
He thought of rubbing his gums with salt. He‘d
never given the children any plain salt and he was curious about his reaction.
He wetted his finger with saliva and plunged it in the salt. He put his arm
around the boy’s head and rubbed the swollen gum with his finger. The boy’s
face contracted in a salty funny grimace and Alexander broke into hearty
laughter! The children turned and looked at him surprised. Boy ‘3’ continued to lick his mouth and
Alexander laughed again and kissed him.
Girl ‘9’ of the twins made a little laugh
and the others looked at her.
Alexander walked before her, clapped his hands
and laughed; the girl imitated him emitting a joyous laughing scream and it was
not long before the cave echoed with similar sounds.
The sky had been lead-colored since the
morning.
“it’s going to rain”.
The children had never seen the rain; they
didn’t walk out of the cave by themselves, they always stopped before the
entrance. If it rained, it would be a good chance to lure them out. In the
afternoon it began to drizzle; the children heard the sound and looked at him.
Alexander smiled at them, walked to the entrance and they followed him,
crowding around him. He waited for a while so that they could see and feel the
smell of the wet soil and then went to stand under the rain. He clapped his
hands and laughed, he opened his mouth and, ostentatiously, drank the falling
water. The children looked at him attentively; the stronger the rain became,
the more he danced.
<Tso tso>, said boy ‘14’ imitating the sound of the rain.
Then he followed him; he came walking carefully and stood beside him. Alexander
lay down on the muddy ground and the boy came to his lap, both playing in the
mud and laughing joyously. One by one, the children came over to do the same.
A lightning streaked the sky and they looked
at him. Alexander clapped his hands
smiling, stood up and began washing the mud off. The children tried to imitate
him; he cleaned them a little and noticed that no-one was shivering. He went to
the entrance followed by them all, led them to the fire and began bouncing up
and down around it; they imitated him
but, as they were getting dry, thunderbolts resonated again. Alexander took a
torch, stood by the entrance and, at each thunderbolt, he laughed and waved the
torch. The children looked at the two fires with interest.
Alexander knew they were watching them from
Oneiroupolis but, with time, he
remembered it more and more seldom. Sometimes, startled by the remembrance of
the camera, he looked up, over the cave entrance, and held his hand up in a
salute, a move copied by the children.
Each morning, Alexander took the food they’d
need for the day and the children learnt to eat only a little and only when
they were really hungry. They learnt what their turn was, and waited patiently
for whatever they’d get, but he didn’t hamper their initiatives for what they
did in other occasions.
He had to get them meat, so he had to accustom
them to his absence. In the morning he woke up early, went to the olive tree
and cut off a branch which he fastened at the entrance. Then he climbed to the
head of the hill, hid himself and waited. After a while
the children came out, went to the brook, drank
water and started looking for him. They clapped their hands and shouted <Khakha>. Alexander smiled with his new
name. The children went over to the tree and “fertilized” it. They did their
“need” around a tree, and when this spot was full with manure they moved to
another.
Girl ‘9’ took a cotton
tuft and put it in her mouth; she chewed but did not relish the taste. She
tried to take it out but it got entangled to her teeth and a long fiber was
formed as she pulled it.
They cut tomatoes, cucumbers and peppers,
looked with craving at the branches of the apple tree which were loaded with
apples but too high for them to reach; than they sat down to eat beneath the
olive tree at the center of the plants area.
Their games were toneless and nervous.
Alexander appeared at the entrance a little
before dark, took the branch and showed it to them. The children run to him
shouting <Khakha>.
Two days later he woke up early and again put
an olive branch at the entrance. He cut some fruit leaving it under the trees and
climbed up the hill. Today he’d be gone for the night, the first night the
children would remain by themselves.
The children reacted better.
Next morning, he walked into the cave with the
olive branch and woke them up. Now they were ready to be left back a little
longer; he was at peace about their safety.
Two days later he left back some food and the
branch which he hoped they had combined with his absence at the entrance and
took off early for the animals area. He arrived there in the afternoon and took
some rest, enjoying the harmony. He looked around him for the potential victim.
He walked near a lamb, grabbed it and held it between his legs, then shouted to
scare the other animals away and concentrated himself. He raised a heavy stone
and let it fall with vehemence on the animal’s head. He had to feed the
children but, in that moment, he felt sorry for the life that was lost… At least he had offered an instant death.
He carried the pieces stuck in a withe upon
his shoulders and the eggs into the lamb’s skin. When he arrived near the cave
he left them down and hid the skin. He walked in waving the olive branch and
the children run and put their arms around him. He took a charred torch and
some wood and made a fire outside; he didn’t want the heavy smell of the meat
to linger in the cave. The children looked attentively, especially at the eggs,
Boy ‘8’grabbed one and tried to bite it,
his teeth slid on the shell and he tried again, pressing harder. The egg broke
in his mouth and he got smeared. They laughed at his face and he wiped his
cheeks with the palm of his hand, wiping it in turn on the face of boy ‘14’ who stood next to him and also
laughed. Alexander took the eggs carefully and put them near the fire. In a
while the place was filled with the smell of burning meat; the children sat
around waiting. He took some lemons, brought salt on a wide leaf, threw some
salt on the meat, sprayed it with some drops of lemon and showed the ruby roast
to the children. He ripped first at the roasted meat with his teeth and the
children imitated
him. In a while they were moaning with
pleasure. Alexander peeled an egg, threw some salt on it and gave it to girl ‘1’.
Boy ‘14’ had woken up early and, to surprise
the rest, climbed up the trees, cut fruit and collected everything under the
olive tree. He took a tangerine and walked into the creek to enjoy it in the
freshness of the water. He cut off the short stem, threw it to the ground, then
peeled the skin off the tangerine throwing the pieces to the ground so that he
could use them later as manure and started to nipple on the sweet slivers. The
pieces of the tangerine skin had fallen near the water and before long one of
them was carried away and passed in front of him. He reached it, took it out,
examined it and left it back on the water. Continuing to observe its course, he
laid next to it a piece of the tangerine but this traveled half sunk in the
water. He stood watching, then went near the concave skin and put a small
tangerine slice on it. The piece of the skin, moved from side to side, regained
equilibrium and continued moving.
Boy ‘14’ said <Ohhh!> in amazement, stayed still for a
while and then dashed out of the water. He cut off various branches and fruit,
went into the creek and put them in water. He noticed that some floated and
others went down. He experimented for quite some time and then looked eagerly
towards the cave.
- <Eeey>… he shouted. <Eeey>…
The twins appeared at the entrance. Boy ‘14’ jumped up and down and nodded
inviting them to come quickly. Boy ‘11’ looked inside the cave and hastily
said <eeey, Boh>.
They came to the creek almost running.
- <Toh> said ‘14’ triumphantly and showed them the
floating pieces of fruit. They looked at them with surprise and then rushed to
embrace him, enthusiastic with his discovery. They turned and looked at
Alexander. He smiled and applauded in reward.
Boy ‘14’ raised his
palms indicating he wanted their attention. He cut four branches, then took
four apples and, using the branches, he united the apples in a frame. He showed
them to the others and then pushed them under the surface of the water.
Buoyancy made them come up to the surface.
- <Ooo>! they admired and clapped their
hands.
Boy ‘14’ raised his
palms again and took one apple. He showed it to them smiling and then put it
gently over the other four. They liked it like crazy, they clapped their hands
and splashed in the water glancing and pointing at the five apples in
admiration and then ‘14’ raised his palms again. They stopped and waited.
- <Toh>, he said and pointed towards the
threes. <Toh>.
- <Ooo>! they admired and clapped their
hands.
Boy ‘14’ raised his
palms again and took one apple. He showed it to them smiling and then put it
gently over the other four. They liked it like crazy, they clapped their hands
and splashed in the water glancing and pointing at the five apples in
admiration and then ‘14’ raised his palms again. They stopped and waited.
- <Toh>, he said and pointed towards the
threes. <Toh>.
He came out of the creek and nodded to the rest
to follow him. He went to the trees and cut impatiently some long branches.
When he had enough, he took them in his arms and run to the creek. They looked
at him without understanding but they followed with enthusiasm. He deposited
the branches, put some of them next to each other and tried to hold them
together with some more branches, vertical to the first. He pushed the whole
thing into the water; the branches stood on the surface for a while and then
came apart. But it was enough for the others to understand what he wanted to
do.
They clapped their hands but at the same time
girl ‘9’ and boy ‘3’ left running. They came back
almost immediately, ‘9’ holding a long fiber of cotton and ‘3’ a fig-tree branch. Girl ‘9’ walked into the creek, put the
fiber around the two branches and showed this makeshift binding to the others.
They applauded at her inventiveness and then looked at boy ‘3’; he peeled off some bark along the
branch and showed it to them. They laughed and clapped their hands for his
thought too.
They worked heartily all day and built a
strong raft. Alexander watched them satisfied with their inventiveness in
making knots and junctions. They took the raft, pushed it into the water and,
as it glided they applauded enthusiastically. Boy ‘14’ walked into the water, grasped the
edge of the raft and, lightly, jumped and lay upon it. They looked at him in
admiration for a while and then they all ran and tried to climb on the raft. It
broke apart and they all sank.
Pieces of fruit and bark had ran ashore in
various niches of the creek. While taking some rest, girl ‘13’ noticed that one piece held water
in it. She took it, emptied it, filled it again, then raised her hand and
emptied it. Most of the others saw her and clapped their hands enthusiastically.
“That’s my girl!” thought Alexander.
Boy ‘8’, who had been
musing, was curious to know and asked <Eee, eee?>
‘13’ approached him, filled the bark
with water and splashed it over him.
The twins didn’t know they were twins. The
boys could see the resemblance of the girls but they didn’t know that they,
too, looked so alike. The two girls, on the other hand, could see that boys ‘11’ and ‘12’ looked the same but couldn’t
imagine this held true for them, too. The others had tried to explain it but
hadn’t made it. They went to Khakha, stood before him and put the twins in
their middle. Girl ‘1’ leaned her palms first on the girls’ and then
on the boys’ faces. Alexander understood what they wanted and nodded to them to
follow him.
He went to the trees and cut some fruit,
giving one piece to each child. He gave two apples to the twin boys and two
oranges to the girls. The others grasped the meaning and clapped their hands in
agreement. The four twins continued to look inquisitively. Alexander called for
the attention of the girls, approached the boys and united the hands holding
the apples, then gently pushed their heads near each other and raised their
hands under their faces. . The
twin girls and everybody else agreed but the boys did not understand. Alexander
asked for their attention, approached the girls, united their heads and brought
their hands with the oranges under their faces. The boys nodded consent and then
looked at each other startled. Boy ‘11’ raised his hand and grabbed the nose of
‘12’ and then his own. The others agreed and encouraged him by clapping their
hands. He took out his tongue in front of his brother’s face and he did the
same. Girl ‘9’Inflated her cheeks and instantly girl ‘10’ did the same. They brought their heads next to
each other and looked at the others. They were agreeing and smiling.
Boy ’14’ raised his palms. He approached boy
‘3’ and pointed at his eyes, then went near girl ‘7; and did the same, then
pointed at the sky. Everybody agreed and boy ‘8’ walked to him and indicated
that his eye, too, were like those of boy ‘3’ and girl ‘7’ and like the sky.
They all looked at other with interest, then sat under the olive tree showing
their resemblances to each other.
They began their acquaintance with themselves
through the others’ features. They imprinted these similarities in their minds
and they often touched these common features on the others’ face. They had
always enjoyed contact since they were babies; they never sat without somehow
touching the child next to them and they slept almost embracing each other. But
now, these similarities made them love each other so much that they did not
understand if they loved their own lips, which they couldn’t see, or the
mouth of the other, which they saw and
which they were told that was so resembled
their own. They loved each other as if all were one.
They searched for similarities in their
bodies, too. This was easier, since they could see the front of their body.
Alexander noticed that their genitals didn’t impress them more than any other
parts that were similar or dissimilar; anyway, both boys and girls urinated
standing up. When, however, hair started to appear on boy ‘8’, it made an
effect on them. They ran to Khakha and ‘8’ grasped the man’s thick hair showing
the scant hair on his own pubic. Alexander nodded agreement and smiled.
“Adolescents”
They all kneeled before him and touched this hair that resembled
Alexander’s. These caresses however aroused functions that made his penis start
to harden. This surprised them and made them interested to touch it again.
Boy’s ‘8’ penis went from hand to hand, hardening and erecting and everybody
was amazed about it. Poor ‘8’, with a funny expression on his face and
unable to walk, was pushed to Alexander so that he, too, could see. Alexander
made an effort not to laugh but admired the boy’s nature. Then he realized that
the “children” were almost as tall as he.
The penis started to shrink and the boy said <O, o, o> in
disappointment. He went before the others moving his hips vehemently and his
penis went from one side to the other bumping on his body with a soft whipping
sound. They smiled kindly at him but nobody had the curiosity to touch him
again.
Alexander told them almost nothing if someone didn’t have the
curiosity to ask, but then everybody paid close attention because they realized
that it was also their own question, a question they simply hadn’t thought of
up to that moment.
Boy ‘11’ pointed at the setting sun, touched his head and nodded <Noo>. Girl ‘5’ also
pointed towards east at the whitish moon, indicating that neither she could
understand what it was. Everybody agreed and waited. Alexander nodded, inviting
them to follow him; he led them into the cave and showed them the fire. The
children were surprised. They pointed at the sky and at the fire and Alexander
affirmed.
They stood by the entrance, looking at the sky and at the fire and
seemed nervous because they could not understand.
A crucial question, something that haunts you and escapes your
understanding for a long time, is a chaotic situation for the mind which
strives to understand, to reach a conclusion, to create order. The body will
suffer too. He had to provide a satisfactory answer.
Alexander asked for their attention by raising his palms. He took branches out of the fire and gave
each one a burning branch to hold. They
went outside and Alexander had half of the children go up the hill, to
sit and wait there. He took the rest with him, indicating that they were to
walk without looking back and that they had to hold the torches before their
chest.
Every while he turned to look over his shoulder. At a certain point he saw a light go downhill, stand still for a while and then go uphill again. “Hm! Someone has visited the pickles”, he thought and smiled. When he liked the view of the hill, he nodded that they could turn.
The children looked but didn’t understand anything. Alexander smiled, the fires
up the hill looked like the stars. He made them stand further apart and
indicated they should hold the torches up. He didn’t see any reaction from the
hill. He nodded to the children to approach and they all united their torches
in a big fire. He looked towards the hill and saw the little stars unite in a
bigger one. They noticed this motion and stared fervidly. Alexander made the
torches draw apart and, instantly, the big star broke apart in smaller ones.
The children understood and stamped their feet exhilarated. They again united
the branches and the children on the hill imitated them. The children pointed at
the stars, then pointed at the fires, understood and shouted <Oh, oh> in
enthusiasm. In a moment of quiet, they heard the others answer <Oh, oh>.
This lead to renewed celebrations and signals and they didn’t leave
until their branches were burnt out.
They lay in the starlight and looked at the sky. A star fell and boy
‘8’ indicated it with enthusiasm. He ran into the cave, brought a torch
and moved it replying to the signal. Satisfied, they cuddled each other and
fell asleep.
Alexander smiled. How right they were!
Our galaxy is a grain between other galaxies, our planetary system
is a grain in our galaxy, the Earth is a grain in our planetary system and man
a grain onto the Earth. What should he try to find? The same laws apply
everywhere, why should he look for other creatures? What would it matter if
they’d differ a little in the form? What would be different if their technology
would be a little more advanced? It doesn’t matter how comfortably you live but
how happy you are. Embrace and love your neighbor, because it’s only with him
that you may be happy.
They were under the
olive tree eating fruit. Boy ‘14’ kept
staring at the tree so long that the others noticed it. He sat up and went
around the olive tree, then looked at the other trees and again walked around
the olive. He stood still for a while and then looked at the others with an
intense expression on his face. He saw they were observing him attentively; he
put his arms around the trunk and then pointed at the other trees. They nodded
that they could not understand.
‘14’ looked at the trees
pensively and beckoned, inviting them to follow him.
He walked to the apple trees and cut a fruit from each one of them. He gave the apples to girl ‘1’ and then went to the orange trees. He cut an orange from each tree and gave them to girl ‘2’. He took lemons and nodded to the others to follow him. He returned under the olive tree and put the four apples in a row on the ground; over them he laid side by side the 3 oranges and under the apples, in one more parallel row, he put the two lemons. He looked at them; he liked them all lined up; then he got up, jumped into the air and grasped an olive branch. He cut an olive, showed it to them and put it underneath the lemons. He sat on the ground and invited the others to observe them.
They sat in a circle observing the fruits.
They realized he was indicating something special but couldn’t understand what
it was. They stayed there long and, every now and then, ‘14’ pointed at the
olive. At some point, girl ‘9’ took the apples and carried them over the
oranges; she smiled satisfied, she liked the form more in this way. The other
liked it better, too, and clapped their hands. They looked at the right angle
triangle they had formed with interest.
Girl ‘13’ rose to her feet and started collecting pebbles from around the place; one
by one, she placed them over the apples, creating a new row and increasing it
by one. Boy ‘11’ jumped up, ran to the roses, cut some buds and he, too, added
a new row over the pebbles. The buds were not enough to increase the number by
one, which made the rest of them laugh, and ‘11’ used a twig to draw what
looked like a flower at the empty position. They laughed and clapped their
hands with enthusiasm for his thought and boy ‘12’ took the twig and drew a new
row over the rest. Then girl ‘12’ took the twig and created her row, too, but
an apple tree stood in the way and didn’t let her finish it. She looked
disappointed at the others but boy ‘14’ took the olive from the ground and
nodded, inviting them to follow him.
He went to the clearing in front of
the cave, solemnly placed the olive fruit upon the earth and drew two lines
over it. Then he handed the twig over to ‘1’. She drew three lines and gave the
twig to ‘2’. She also drew her lines and passed the twig to boy ‘3’. One after
the other they made their rows and, when girl ‘13’ had finished, she gave the
twig to boy ‘14’. He started a new circle of lines that lead them away from the
entrance by length and width. It was getting dark and they went on with their
lines nearing the trees that would again stand in their way; they looked at the
entrance of the cave that had been their starting point and at the place where
they were now and they understood that, if they would go on next day and had
enough space, there would always be someone who could make a new row, adding
one more line.
They went to the entrance and
looked at the olive tree and then at the rows lying in front of them; then they
climbed at the top of the hill and they imagined the lines filling the whole area and clapped their hands in
wonder because, from that lonely olive tree, they understood the value of One.
And from One, Infinity.
Girl ‘10’ was aching; it was the first time anyone was feeling pain since when they were growing teeth. She lay on the sand, surrounded by all the others, and grabbing her belly. They looked at her uneasily, they touched her, caressed her and looked at Alexander. He felt her swollen belly, realized that the pain was in the fallopian tubes and her waist and made a negative sign because there was not much he could do. He massaged her back and waist and went out of the cave.
He heard them calling him and saw
most of them gathered at the entrance; they were visibly upset and beckoned
that he should come quickly. Alexander ran to them and, entering the cave, saw
the lying girl. Girl ‘9’ was holding her knees; she touched her sister’s vulva
with her hand and showed him blood.
“The first woman”
Alexander went out and came back
holding a rose in his hand. He showed it to everybody and then put it on the
girl’s belly, smiled and clapped his hands. The red color of the flower,
similar to that of the liquid they were seeing running out of the body for the
first time, and Kha-Kha’s cool reaction, reassured them. Alexander brought some
pieces of cotton; he softly wiped the blood and put some cotton on the girl.
Later ‘10’ felt better, sat up and felt the liquid flowing out of her. She took
the cotton, smelled it and threw it in the fire. Her fingers were covered in
blood and she wiped them on her belly. These three red lines seemed nice to ‘9’
and she asked her for some blood, so they would look identical in that, too.
Girl ‘10’ lay down and her sister
extended her hand and took some blood on her fingertips. She drew three lines
on her belly and showed them to the others.
Everybody liked the ornament and,
one by one, they all took blood to put on themselves, one on the chest, the
other on his face; boy ‘8’ put it along his penis because he wanted to stress that
point. All this touching aroused girl ‘10’ who started to move her hips asking
for more caresses. Boy ‘8’, who had felt something similar, obliged; he lay
alongside her and put his hand between her legs. In a while, feeling grateful,
the girl reciprocated the caress.
They embraced tightly and, while
the boy was enjoying this contact, he entered her with vehemence. The girl
moaned with pain, he stopped and looked at her but she drew him back to her.
She felt something spreading inside her, filling her with saltiness; she felt
this saltiness come up to her mouth, wanted to transmit it to him, so she
grabbed his head and pressed her mouth on his.
Their moaning and movements
attracted the interest of the others; they sat around the sand and watched
them.
The girl felt tension and sweetness
in every muscle; her nose captured the wonderful smell of their bodies; her
body was captivated in the unprecedented sensation and her mind was anxiously
watching what was happening, becoming more and more beautiful, she
didn’t know what to expect and what it would all end up to…
The shouts of their climax worried
the other children; girl ‘9’ made a sign
that they should separate them; they all agreed but, before they attempted
anything, the two bodies drew away from each other panting and with a serene
expression on their faces.
The tension in her body had
subsided but her mind was upset; what she was feeling made her sit up; she
looked around her and felt that the cave was crushing her and almost ran out.
The others followed her with curiosity and saw her moving in an unusual way.
She took some steps , then changed her mind and turned to another direction, looking around her and crying <A…A….A….>
It was too big, what she was
feeling, she almost could not stand it. She was overflowing with love for
everything she saw around her, she opened her arms to hug them, she swirled,
she raised her face up and, out of her very soul, came this <A> that she cried moaning because she
did not know how else to express this happiness, where to direct her
gratefulness and in her mind there flashed the idea that this wonderful and
huge sentiment should be addressed to something Wonderful and Huge; to This she
wanted to say “thanks”.
As
Alexander was watching her, he sensed what was happening to her and remembered
Konstantin’s words: “Man reaches God through logic but also through sentiments.
Protect him from every fear and he will feel Him through gratefulness”.
They had never wandered away from
their area. They used to walk to the top of the hill when the sunset colors
were intense and, holding each other, they gazed around. The earth was a barren
place and the nicest spot was under their feet.
Alexander woke them up one morning
and nodded inviting them to follow him. He led them to the raft he had asked
them to make; upon it, they put a dense layer of leaves and they loaded wood
and food. He took the “stones” and some cotton and put them in the boat too;
then he told the first four to hold the raft up and he set forth. The children
followed him puzzled, since this was something they had never done before, but
when they passed their creek they gamboled joyously.
They walked alongside the river,
every now and then taking turns carrying the raft. Around noon they smelled the
air, their sensitive nostrils catching a different smell and looked towards the
yet invisible sea. They felt that the
sky had approached the earth.
Alexander invited them to leave the
raft down and they followed him on a small hill nearby. From there, they saw
the sea for the first time.
He showed them the direction of the
river reaching to the sea and they were amazed at the huge quantity of water.
- <Tso?> asked boy ‘14’ indicating the sky.
Alexander clapped his hands in
approval of his thought.
They reached the sea and Alexander
threw himself into the water and swam with joyous screams. They observed him
for a while and then they followed him in the same manner. They had swam in the
creek since they were babies but the buoyancy of the sea made swimming easier;
they enjoyed diving and playing and they didn’t stop licking the saltiness on
their lips.
Alexander took them to the salt
pits, arranged the leaves on the raft so as to leave no openings, took a
handful of salt and put it on the leaves. He nodded to the children to continue
loading and returned to the sea. He swam to the reefs and there he dove looking
for some kind of life. He was enthusiastic to see some small fish and mussels.
He stepped on the rocks and began to fumble around carefully, taking out only
the big ones.
The children finished loading the
salt. He called them and, when they reached him, he showed them the mussels.
They looked at them but didn’t show any interest; they seemed like stones to
them. Alexander told them they were <Taktak> and boy ‘8’ took one and
tried to bite it like an almond. Alexander managed just in time to stop him
from breaking his teeth; he took it from him, gave all the mussels to girl ‘1’ and invited them with a nod to
dive their heads and see. When they understood what they should do, they spread
along the reefs and started collecting.
Girl ‘1’ returned the mussels to Alexander
because she wanted to collect some of her own. KhaKha showed them his blackened palms and swam away on
his back. They understood how many they had to collect and how they should
leave the place.
He lit the fire and, until the wood
would turn to embers, he returned near them.
The turmoil had attracted some
small fishes; although the children’s glance fell on them, they didn’t see them.
Alexander went round to the other side of the cliffs; there, to his surprise
and enthusiasm, he discovered a lobster whose foot was caught between the
stones and was desperately trying to break loose. He grabbed him and carried
him on the surface. For a whole minute he considered what to do. He had decided
to take the children to the animals so they would know there were other forms
of life. His heart was aching because the years of innocence would be over.
They would know the living food and death.
He showed them the lobster which
they thought was similar to a carrot. They came out of the sea and approached
the fire. Alexander let the lobster down; the animal began to walk towards the
sea and this surprised them because it glided like an orange and had funny
branches. They knelt around it and it stopped, moving its calipers menacingly.
- <Too>? asked boy ‘14’.
-<Noo>, said Alexander, it was not a plant. <Taktak>, he added hesitantly.
They were impressed by this kind of food that moved by itself without anybody touching it. Alexander took a twig and came up to the lobster which grabbed it with its calipers making the children scream. Then he threw some sand on it, took it carefully and put it on the embers. He put the mussels next to it, ripped a lemon apart and invited the children to sit down.
They loved the deliciousness of the
mussels and then the lobster. That evening they played imitating the lobster’s
movements and Alexander thought with relief that they had not understood.
They were at the rock where they
kept the pickles when ‘9’ screamed holding her belly. She grasped the
hands of those next to her and placed their palms there; showing no hurry the
others imitated her and suddenly they felt the kick.
They run to Khakha and showed him
her belly; ‘9’ reenacted the movement she had
felt saying <Bloh, bloh>. Then she touched her head and
said <Noo>.
Alexander clapped his hands and, while they were looking at him with
interest, took a garlic and beckoned them to follow him. He led them to the annual
plants near the creek. Whenever they took a garlic or an onion, they always
planted a new one at its place, so there were little plants in various stages
of development. He showed them one clove and put it in the earth. Then he
pointed at a little green leaflet that had just broken the surface, then to a
slightly bigger plant and he continued till he reached a fully grown plant.
They all agreed, they knew that. Alexander showed the grown plant and placed
his palms next to it, indicating its size. Then he approached a smaller one,
shortening the distance between his palms. He arrived at the smallest tip,
indicating its size with his fingers. Again they all agreed. Then Alexander indicated the height of ‘9’. Then he gradually shortened the distance until
he reached the form which he indicated with his fingers and thus he touched her
belly.
They remained speechless for a
while and looked at one another to ascertain what they had understood.
- <Khakha>, said ‘14’ he indicated his height by
bringing his palm by his head. With knife-like movements he shortened the
distance from the ground, fell on all four and started crawling, then
approached his hand to the ground, showed his two fingers and finally ended on
his belly saying <Bloh?>
Alexander smiled. He went in front
of every woman and indicated her breasts, her genitals, her belly, saying <Bloh>. Then he
indicated the men’s genitals and their bellies and said <Noo Bloh>.
They thought about it for a while,
then ‘14’ took a clove; with it he touched
the ground and said <Too>. He
approached ‘9’, touched the clove on her mouth
and lowered his arm up to her belly.
- <Bloh?>
Alexander nodded negatively. He showed the garlic bulb and with
it touched the bellies of the men. He knelt before ‘14’, held the bulb on his belly and
with his finger indicated a direction up to the end of his penis. Boy ‘8’ approached him so that he could
indicate the path to him, too, which raised some laughs. Alexander gently
indicated the path, then indicated the vulva of ‘9’ and united his hands.
The first year they had lived in
the cave, when the cherry trees had blossomed, he thought to carve a line on
the wall and repeat it every spring so as to know the years that went by. He
changed his mind immediately and wished that these humans would not become
slaves of Time, that they would not discover calendars and clocks. If you know
the years that go by, you also calculate the years to come, you mesmerize and
cage yourself in some kind of age limits, a life-time that you take for granted
and which you’ll probably program correctly – unfortunately.
All women, except ‘13’ had remained pregnant. Alexander
often fondled their puffy bellies and clapped his hands joyously. The men
watched with interest and compared belly sizes putting each woman next to the
other.
It was cherry season again;
Alexander saw they were red enough and beckoned to the children that they could
eat. This roused their celebrations; they were crazy about cherries. They
brought the long ladder they had built to climb up high trees and they cleared
the way for girl ‘1’ to go first, but Alexander grabbed her by the wrist and
stopped her. They looked at him surprised; Khakha pointed at her belly and
shook his head in negation. He did the same for ‘2’ indicating her belly, so
boy ‘3’ happily climbed and grabbed the first cherry; he threw it to Alexander
who tasted it and made an affirmative nod.
They clapped their hands and beat
their feet on the ground; girl ‘4’ approached the ladder but Alexander stopped
her, laughing at her eagerness. He held her in his arms, mustered all women
around him and let only ’13’ go.
She climbed elated , followed by
boy ‘14’. The boys, disciplined, would eat
one cherry and throw one down to the others. Lighter than the boys, ‘13’
climbed to the higher branches and teased the other girls, who nodded
that she should throw them some cherries, by eating the cherries ostentatiously
herself. She found a branch laden with fruit and thought to end their torture
by throwing them the entire branch. She cut it and threw it to the girls who
applauded enthusiastically. Happy with their joy, ‘13’ started frolicking on her branch.
Alexander saw the risk; he
unconsciously cried “DON’T…” but there was no time. No branch prevented her
fall and she kept laughing till she reached the ground. There was a smile on her face, an almost mischievous look
in her eyes; only her neck was broken.
He closed her eyes before the
approaching women could see them, repeating <Don’t, Don’t…>. They looked at her, beckoned to
the men that she was sleeping and they all kept quiet. It did not seem strange
to them, since they fell asleep quite easily; when they were sleepy they just
lied down and fell asleep at once. Now they ate their cherries in silence and,
every now and then, left some near her head.
Alexander lay near her feeling
shattered. He covered his head so that they didn’t see his tears; through his
arms he could see her motionless leg. He thought about the kilometers she
wouldn’t walk, the jumps she wouldn’t dash into, the dances she wouldn’t swirl
to, the sand she wouldn’t bury her feet in, the weight she wouldn’t carry…
“You left so early, my little one”.
He felt
sorry she wouldn’t be with them anymore, sorry for what she had not had the
time to do; but, most of all, he felt sorry for what she had not understood.
The hours passed and they kept
coming by on their toes to see them, impressed that they still slept; they went
away in silence. They didn’t want to disturb them, so they stayed in the cave.
When their voices ceased, Alexander stood up; he put two olive branches in
their places, took the girl in his arms and drew away to bury her; he could not
stand showing death to the children then and there. When he came back, he threw
one of the branches away, scattered the cherries around with aching heart and
lay down.
He was waked up in the morning by
their flustered shouting. He sat up and looked at them; they were on their
knees and boy ‘14’ was holding the olive branch in his hand.
- <Boo?> he asked him.
- <Noo>, said Konstantin and indicated his
eyes to show that he had not seen her.
- <Too>, said girl ‘9’ and pointed at the
cherry tree to indicate the fruits that were no longer by its trunk.
They all agreed that she had eaten
her cherries and gone somewhere.
They waited for her, sad and upset. They kept going to the hilltop to
look around. Boy ‘14’ called them
and he nodded that he would run to the place they had gone to swim and look for
her. They all applauded and wanted to go with him, but Alexander beckoned to
the women that they should not run.
The men set off; the women climbed
the hill and watched them till they vanished from view but didn’t leave the
place; the felt so lonely and they clustered together hugging each other. When
the sun began to scorch, Alexander called them to come down. They obeyed but,
every now and then, one of them went up the hill to look around. It was ‘10’s turn to check and, when she
reached the top, she started shouting <Boh, Boh>.
They all went off running before
Alexander had time to stop them; they climbed the hill and fervently looked
towards the familiar
direction that ‘1’ was
indicating. It was a dot that came nearer. When the dot apart, girl ‘1’ put everybody in line; to her
disappointment she realized that girl ‘13’ was missing. She looked at the
others and ’10’ agreed, indicating the parallel lines they had carved when they
had set off. She hadn’t added one at their return.
They were eating under the olive tree and boy ‘14’ pointed at the meat, the eggs and the
trees; for the first time a question dawned on them, what tree produced these
cutlets, the chicken and the white fruit…
Alexander pointed at the creek and
made the form of a horseshoe on the ground. They nodded they understood. He
showed the hill with their cave and made a circle. Then he carved a line and
pointed at the river. They all agreed that they understood. Alexander extended
the river downwards, designed an X and imitated the moves of swimming. The
children agreed smiling. Then he extended the line upwards and put another x.
He pointed at it emphatically, then pointing at the eggs and the meat. Boy ‘14’ was the first to react manifesting
his interest. He pointed at themselves and, with his fingers, he indicated
walking along the river. Alexander agreed. He had to take them to the area of
the animals. They had to get acquainted with moving food and death.
He woke them up early in the
morning and nodded that they would walk up the river. They agreed gladly. As
they walked, they felt more and more good-tempered with the idea of new things
they’d learn. Their numb souls needed it; the absence of ‘13’ was a part
missing out of everybody’s self.
They made frequent stops; Alexander
did not want the women to get tired and men, who needed the exercise, run ahead
and then returned. They arrived late in the afternoon; he walked into the river
and beckoned them to follow. They climbed a small hill and they saw the animal
area for the first time. They clapped their hands with enthusiasm and ran
eagerly towards the trees.
There, in front of their surprised
eyes, a hen jumped down from a branch and run away. They hardly had the time to
exclaim when a flock of chickens jumped off the tree like ripe fruit and also
rushed away chuckling.
They looked at Alexander with open
mouths; they looked so surprised that he broke into a loud laugh, justifying
one more time the name they had given him.
And then they saw the descent of
the hogs. It was a good time for them to go to the creek, drink water and roll
in the mud. They passed silently by the group of humans leaving them with an
intense smell and wonder.
-<Eeehi>, said boy ‘3’ pointing. The sheep were lying
down and looked like rocks; one of them stood up drawing his attention.
They did not know where to look and
what to see first. They surrounded Alexander and he, putting some hesitation in his voice, told them it was <tactak>.
What strange food!
They followed the pigs and saw them
drink water and splash around delighted. They approached the sheep; some of
them were annoyed and drew away bleating. Boy ‘8’ grabbed a young one and held
it in his arms. They all approached and examined it curiously. What kind of
food is it that can see you? What kind of food is it that can like or dislike
being held? What kind of food is it that, when left down, escapes running?
They knocked nervously on their
heads, to indicate that they could not understand.
A rooster attacked a hen and
climbed on her. They threw their eyes and mouths open when, noticing their
movements, they realized what they were doing.
- <Ahah!> exclaimed boy ‘8’ pointing at
them, almost scared.
But what kind of food is it that
makes love?
‘8’ knelt down and walked on his hands and feet; he threw his hands up, opened and closed his fingers and imitated the movements of the lobster, then pointed at his mouth and stomach.
- <Tactac>, he said sadly.
Girl ‘1’, who especially loved chicken, recognized the hens.
- <Tactac>, she said,
troubled.
They clustered together and looked
at each other inquiringly. They looked at the living beings around them and
found it hard to accept they were food. They threw glances at Alexander, who
realized it was the first time they doubted him.
They were shocked. They needed to
believe in Alexander. They needed to imagine that he knew everything and that
whatever he did or said was right. They wanted him to be perfect so that they
also could reach perfection.
- <Khakha>, said ‘14’. He pointed at the
animals around them and added <Noo Tactac>.
- <Noo Tactac>, said the others in chorus.
It was the first time they
separated themselves from him, first time they had their own opinion.
- <Noo Tacta>, he agreed with them.
- <Bohtach>, said girl ‘1’.
The word <Boh> had different meanings. It meant me, you, us… Now ‘1’ had
found a new word.
- <Bohtac>, the others agreed with her.
- <Bohtac>, repeated Alexander and clapped
his hands.
They run to him and hugged him,
hoping the spark of doubt inside of them would soon burn out.
He had to explain to them. He asked for their attention.
He indicated the area and drew a
circle on the ground. He indicated the hens and drew two of them into the
circle. He indicated the sheep and drew two shapes resembling sheep. He did the
same with the pigs. He indicated the plants saying <Too> and drew 6 carrots repeating <Too>. They beckoned they understood the
correspondence. He asked for their attention and pointed at one of the sheep.
Using his fingers he walked up to the carrot, he said <Tactac>, pretended to chew, pointed at his
stomach and erased the carrot. The children agreed. One by one, he erased all
the carrots and then pointed at the animals. He mimicked anxiety, he pointed at
his stomach pretending to be hungry and saying
<Tactac>. They looked at him puzzled.
He
again asked for their attention and reformed the carrots. He did the mimic of
the sheep going to eat a carrot and then pointed at himself. He walked into the
circle with his fingers, took one more sheep, erased it from the circle and
mimicked themselves eating it. The children reacted with annoyance. He pointed
at the pig, erased the carrot and then mimicked himself taking another pig,
erasing it from the ground and again indicating themselves eating it.
Then boy
‘14’ said<Oh>. He was the first to understand
that, if they didn’t eat some of the <Bohtac>, there wouldn’t remain enough food for the others. And then his
consideration extended into the next conclusion and into a horrifying question…
His feet bent and he sat on the
ground. He closed his eyes and almost didn’t breathe. Then he took a lump of
earth and looked at Alexander.
-<Khakha?> he asked. He
pointed at the animal and then at the lump, he crumbled it into his hand and
let the dirt fall on the ground.
Alexander nodded yes, in sadness.
‘14’ took one more lump and
indicated themselves. He crumbled it saying
and his eyes were enormous with the wish of
the negation…
But he received an affirmative.
‘14’ felt terribly exhausted; he
had to sleep. He lay on his side, shrunk by the thought of death. And then he
realized that he was alive.
Alexander woke upset; he felt there
was something wrong. He saw them sleeping in the sweet dawn, all hugged, under
the trees. He walked into the cave and saw the kids; they were also sleeping
peacefully. No, they were not the cause of his unrest. Walking on his toes so
as not to wake them up, he cut an olive branch and put it where he used to
sleep; he wanted to be alone, to hark at this unrest he felt inside of him. He
walked along the river and, when he had gone far enough, he sat by the water
He closed his eyes and let his mind
flow into space.
He saw Konstantin’s image.
“Master”…
A bright light surrounded his body;
he looked at him and smiled.
“I am leaving”…
“Shall I come with you, Master?”
“You are needed here…”
“Until when?”
“You’ll know”
The light began to fade until it
disappeared.
“Thank you, Master”…
He realized his mistake. He
shouldn’t call him “Master”. His spirit has a name, and by that name he should
refer to him.
“Thank you, Konstantin…”
Chapter 3
The KEYHOLDER opened the niche on
the wall and took out the book. It was a tradition, once a year, to write the
most important facts in the archive. She sat at the desk and threw a glance at
the monitors. She opened the book, took a rooster feather and dipped it in the
beetroot juice; 25-12-401 a.D. she wrote and then stopped.
- 25th
century, she whispered and her eyes wandered in the scant space of the capsule.
400 years of survival in the womb of the earth after the Disaster! She wondered
whether those first men imagined they would go such a long way, but humans
survive and adapt much better if they haven’t known other conditions.
Her gaze
fell on the triptych with the photos of Konstantin, Alexander and Vesta and
then she looked at the table with the Laws which hang in identical copies in
every area of Oneiroupolis. They learnt them since childhood and, at the age of
15, they recited them and took the oath to abide by them
LAW 1. Any
intervention on the Above is forbidden.
LAW 2. Head
of Oneiroupolis is the Keyholder and to Her I obey.
LAW 3.
Euthanasia is allowed only when the training of the substitute is complete. It
is imperative when two active Citizens and the Keyholder agree.
There was one and only law for the
Keyholders. It wasn’t written on any table but on their mind, their soul and their cells. “I will protect the
Above even if I have to destroy Oneiroupolis”. It would suffice that she
thought this phrase over 5 consecutive times and the chip implanted at the back
of her neck would trigger a mechanism of suspension of the basic function of
Oneiroupolis, causing narcosis and asphyxia to its inhabitants.
How was that rime? “Your thought is deadly when it must, turns everybody into dust”… The little girl had talent, she stood out with
her seriousness and her performance in study; she would probably be the next
Keyholder after the next.
The day before, at the Dining Room,
all five generations had assembled to celebrate the advent of the New Year and
the new century. They had brought in even the two psycho patients of the first
generation. It was a sad thing to witness but their eyes brightened up at
moments and even showed some spark of interest.
It was a
sad day, as always; they didn’t forget it was the anniversary of doom. How glad
could they be with the survival of 58 humans out of all humanity! How proud
could they be for the few plants and animals they had saved with them!
She looked again at the page of
recycled paper before her and started to fill the form started centuries ago by
a charismatic Keyholder.
She put a dash corresponding to
births. The 5th generation had been born 10 years ago. They would
have a new generation in 5 years.
Next to deaths she wrote, “One, by
euthanasia, from the 1st generation. Cause of death: schizophrenia”.
The recurrence of mental diseases was the proof against the belief that the
Underworld humans could adapt well. The “frequency booth” had no effect on
them.
Next to population total she wrote
22. Each generation had 5 individuals, always 3 women and two men and had a
difference of 15 years from each other. Thus, the first generation was 70 years
old, the second was at 55, the third, where she belonged, at 40. This was the
active one. The 2 men and the 2 women were responsible for the function of
Oneiroupolis and also for the tuition of the 4th generation which
was now 25 years old. The 5th generation was 10 years old.
Next to education she wrote “Fine”.
The 5th generation had 6 hours of tuition every day, with basic
notions from Mathematics and Geometry, Physics and Chemistry, Philosophy and
Othodoxy, Medicine and Theosophy. The 2nd generation were their
tutors.
She also wrote “Fine” regarding the
education of the 4th generation. Each Citizen educated his or her
substitute in their respective specialty for 10 years, to then have as an
assistant for the remaining five years. During those last years the three women
bore children but the Keyholder remained pregnant only once. The female
Citizen-Doctor knew human physiology and did whatever surgery was necessary.
The male Citizen-Caterer was busy with the plants and the animals and took care
of their multiplication and their good quality. The male Citizen-Engineer was
responsible for the good function of the installations and the female Citizen-Psychologist
took care of the mental health in Oneiroupolis and observed the Above.
Choosing the Keyholder was the most
important thing. During the first years she attended the lessons of all
Citizens, so as to be sure that the substitutes mastered their duties, but also
to be able to intervene in case of emergency. No specialty could be lost,
knowledge was of vital importance for Oneiroupolis. During the next 5 years,
she was initiated in whatever piece of Konstantin’s philosophy had been rescued,
and in breathing.
Every 15 years they celebrated the
hand-over to the next generation; continuators took up their duties and the
Medicine woman implanted the Key at the back of the neck of the Keyholder. It
was then that she learned about the Sacred Book she had to keep and received
the keys to the entrance and the arsenal.
This was their only happy
anniversary.
They knew that in the old era
people celebrated their birthdays or their name-days. These vanished around 50
a.D. They didn’t have names because they didn’t want them. The name is inferior
to the specialty and when someone did or said something, he or she should have
the responsibility that went with this stance.
Most of the first scientists were
Christian but there also were 3 Muslims, 4 Buddhists and 2 Atheists. When the
first children were old enough, the matter of religion and time measurement was
addressed. The result of the dispute was a Hyper-religion which included
references to God, Allah, Yahweh, Buddha… Oneiroupolis would not have stood
fanaticism. The subject was taught by Konstantin who had concerned himself with
all religions in his life, ending up where he had started from: Orthodoxy.
Since they all trusted his logic and his judgment more than their own notions,
Orthodoxy had prevailed. As commencement of time they considered the first day
after the Disaster.
She threw a glance at the monitors
and, instinctively, looked for her companion. His sensational beauty still
surprised her, she hadn’t grown accustomed to it all those years.
“Since I was a little girl I liked
to watch children’s movies and cartoons; there weren’t many of them but I was
told they were the best because the President always wanted the best for his
guests. I used to laugh with all those clouts and it was the only laugh to be
heard in Oneiroupolis; when Louis had
grown up too, we made quite a fuss but no-one ever told us to keep quiet.
By watching movies and series we
learnt how the world was of old, before the Disaster. What charmed me the most
was the waves; it was the waves I would have liked to see most of all, a big
blue wave with a white crest splashing upon the rocks. I had a CD with all the
waves included in the movies and Louis, who adored the sun, had his, with
sunrises and sunsets. One day he came running and I knew from his joyous look
that he had something important to tell me.
- You won’t believe this! There was
a king with my name, who also loved the sun and was named Roi Soleil! It’s from him I got my name. (Translator’s note: Louis 14th,
king of France,
1638-1715 )
- Wrong! When you were born, they
asked me “Vesta darling, how shall we call the little boy?” ‘Louis de Funes’, I said.
- Louis de Funès? He said, disappointed. I don’t like
it, I prefer to think it comes from Roi Soleil.
- Well, now that I think of it
again, it comes from Louis de Brainless!
A terrible brawl started at that
moment; the outcome was a reconciliation CD with big waves…. at sunset, a
present of daddy-Electronics expert.
During that time we laughed and
teased whoever we
met. We loved them all but we also had our preferences. We both agreed on
mummy-Dentist, who was also our teacher; Louis liked especially
daddy-Veterinarian because he let him play with piglets and I had a weakness
for mummy-Psychologist, I guess because she played with us and talked to us
more than the rest. One day, I grabbed Louis by the hand and run before her.
- I don’t understand; in the movies
we see, in the old times a child could have two daddies but only one mum. How
come we have more mums?
- It’ s because all mums helped; we
took an oath that you would be children of all of us and never to disclose our
secret. It was a heavy oath between the women who…
- Weren’t we both delivered by
daddy-Gynecologist?
- Of course.
- Alright then, since you took an
oath and can’t tell, I will go and ask him which mum gave birth to me, I said,
irritated.
- And to me, cried Louis, stamping
his foot on the floor.
- Calm down, she said and knelt
before us. It doesn’t matter which mum gave birth to you because we all love
you the same. As you said, in the old times it was different; now all mums
cannot have many children because food wouldn’t be enough for everybody. We
have you, you are children of all of us and…
- We already know that, I cut her
short again, but we want to know which mum gave birth to us; let’s go, Louis…
- Stop, he won’t tell you, he
doesn’t know; he hasn’t seen because… we had a blackout…
- Darn the luck!, said
easy-to-convince Louis and the discussion ended there.
Personally, I found the coincidence
of a blackout at both our births quite suspicious, but it suddenly dawned upon
me that, if I finally got to know who my mother was, I might feel disappointed
because I preferred mum-Psychologist.
Although we had the same parents we
knew we were not brother and sister, so we understood that, when we would grow
up we’d marry; we were ok with that but felt uneasy about sex because neither
of us wanted it.
-Louis, do you like me?
- Sure, you have such a cute gait, he repeated everybody’s favorite phrase.
Sometimes we used to watch their
rooms to find out who “was doing it” with whom but we didn’t see any move and
calmed down somehow. That’s why we couldn’t understand their obsession with
that serial. There was always someone there to watch it and although they must
have seen it several times, since they were watching it for years, it kept
their interest. Whenever we tried to enter the Control Room, they shouted “out,
this is grown people’s stuff”. We saw there were naked people in the film, which
means the story included sex, and this stressed us a little bit. We liked
action films, “True Lies” couldn’t compare with the crap they were watching! We
concluded that grown ups were “strange fruit” and left them alone.
One day, daddy-Agriculturist called us to show us how he fertilized citrus-trees. I immediately let Louis know that “fertilized” meant how plants had sex. Daddy-Agriculturist took pollen from the flower of one of the trees and put it into the flower of another tree. We fertilized some trees too, and Louis whispered to me “Well, I don’t think I am interested in sex at all”.
It was then that one of the lamps
went out and daddy –Agriculturist was upset. He run to find the others in the
Dining Room and we ran behind him because we loved turmoil and disorder. No
matter how unpleasant for the grown-ups a situation was, it was fun to us
because it livened up Oneiroupolis.
Those were special lamps that helped in something called “photosynthesis” for the plants. Now that one of them was fulminated, soon the others would follow and they could not get fixed, neither were more of them to be found.
- If there is no photosynthesis,
plants will wither and we won’t have food, I whispered to Louis; no grown-up
was talking at that moment though, and I was heard.
- We are lucky to have lots of
pigs, said daddy-Chemist quite seriously and Louis ran away in tears.
I didn’t follow him because I
wanted to know how things would develop, all the more because
mummy-Psychologist, who did run after him, would handle it better than me. I
was lucky to stay, because an amazing brawl broke out.
- Alright then, see what you
managed! Did you like making the boy cry? Shouted daddy-Environmentalist.
- Did I say any lie? Answered daddy-Chemist.
- You didn’t, but you didn’t have
to mention that; you know how much he adores pigs.
- So do I!
At that they came to blows but
daddy-Konstantin raised his hands and they stopped.
- We’ll transform the lift and
transport the plants there.
How strange!
This phrase did not disturb them at all, on the contrary, they seemed to like
it. Daddy-Konstantin was a wise man and whatever he said was right, but my hair
stood on end with fear. Before the lift there was a door with a scull on it and
a sign «ACCESS FORBIDDEN» «DANGER OF DEATH».
Behind this
door, there was the elevator leading to the Upper World. They had gone out
years ago and they had seen that the earth had been destroyed and we couldn’t
live there because the place was full of enormous viruses and microbes! When
they came back they closed the elevator but some small viruses managed to come
inside and so whoever passed the “EXIT” would catch… death.
- But out
there, there are viruses and microbes! I pointed out in a fainted voice.
- Oh! We’ve
forgotten that, said mummy-Dentist alarmed, bringing her palms to her cheeks.
- We will put
on our suits and place glasses so that light passes but microbes stay out… said
daddy-Agriculturist.
-But, how is
it possible that you forgot? I am so young and yet I remember it and you
forgot?
- You were
born and got accustomed to these conditions…. For us it is different. We grew
up differently and no matter how many years will pass, there will always come
moments in which we’ll forget, explained mummy-Dentist. Well, just this morning
when I woke up I thought of taking my little car and go to the beach… swim in
the waves and…
Then
daddy-Chemist, in a low voice, uttered a swear that made mummy-Dentist glare at
him angrily and daddy-Environmentalist shout indignantly “shut up for once”…
and they shoved me out of the room. But I had overheard the swear. He had said "Vamos a la playa".
I run all joy
to Louis to tell him about the big fuss we would have and about the suits that we’d finally get to see. They
kept them safe in lockers and didn’t take them out but we knew they were like
the ones in the film “Apollo 13”. Then I told him about the new swear I had
heard; “Oh my”, said Louis disgusted.
Oneiroupolis
was all abuzz in a few hours. Tools, iron and wooden parts, and quantities of
soil were being prepared and we didn’t know where to go and what to see first.
Then the voice of daddy-Security came out of the loudspeakers. “Oneiroupolis
enters state of quarantine. Those with no special suits immediately go and stay
in their rooms”. I grabbed Louis by the hand and we run to our room.
-What a pity,
I said, we are the only ones without a suit…
The truth is
there were 5 children suits; the President had been so thoughtful about the
children of his guests, but we didn’t know it then.
Daddy-Electronic
had created a music with the functions of my body. He had used drums for the
sound of my heart, a soft sound of waves for my breath, a harp for the
fluttering of my eyelids; he had included even the different sound of my feet,
using a piccolo and holding one note a little longer. He loved me too much to
change it. “Vesta” was heard regularly in most areas in Oneiroupolis. When he
considered creating a “Louis” song, my sweet one cut him short saying “no, I
want only “VESTA” to be heard”.
I turned the
volume down and we stuck our ears to the door to hear what was going on
outside, but we were disappointed. I was doing the exercises for my leg when
mum-Psychologist walked in, with a tray of food, wearing her suit. We screamed ecstatically and hugged her.
- I must go, she said hastily; we have many things to do. You
eat, get some sleep and have a good time. There is a quarantine, so I will lock
your door in case someone forgets and opens it. She went out in a hurry and
locked us in. Me and Louis looked at each other indecisively because we didn’t
know whether we would like that, whether it was good or bad for us. Louis,
scary of the worst, threw in his swear.
-Vamos a la playa!
Quarantine is
not a nice thing. We stayed locked for days and we would have gone mad if they
didn’t come to see us every now and then, in their suits. When we got out we
noticed some changes. First of all they put us in a new room near the Dinning
Room and daddy-Agriculturist moved to the other end, near the “EXIT” so as to
be near hisplace of work. From now on, due to the viruses
and microbes, we couldn’t go help him but we didn’t care since – and this was
the best of it all – they gave us the plant area for some time. That enormous
place would be ours! There was still soil, pots, withered flowers, broken
tools, old stuff; what you’d call a first class assembly.
- This will be
our office, I said joyously to Louis, here we can do whatever we want…
- And not let
grown-ups disturb us!
I wrote with
big letters on a piece of cardboard “ENTRANCE FORBIDDEN TO GROWN-UPS”. Louis
read it, thought about it for a while and shook his head.
- Look what you’d do! You forbid the entrance to grown-ups. But
you are older than I am, so does it mean that you forbid the entrance to
yourself, too?
He was right,
so I added “IT IS ALLOWED ONLY TO THOSE OF THE ABOVE WHO ARE 10 YEARS OLD”
- And what
about me? said Louis putting on a sour face.
“EXCLUDING
THOSE WHO ARE 6 YEARS OLD”, I added. The result pleased us, so we stuck the
cardboard on the door, went in and screamed like mad.
As time went
by the plants grew up better, our food became more savory and my body changed.
One day mummy-Psychologist secluded me and told me I would soon become a woman.
I was scared and asked her whether this meant I should have sex, but she
reassured me that sex is not obligatory to no-one and you have it only if you
want and with whom you want…
- Do you have
sex?
- … and you
talk about it IF you want, she said severely.
I let Louis
know about all this; he was stressed and asked me when he’d become a man.
- When you
grow a moustache, in about 4 years….
- We have time
then, he said with a sigh of relief.
We were
passing by the Control Room and we immediately realized something bad had
happened. They were all gathered under the monitors and watched standing up;
some were hugging, some crying. We stole in noiselessly and I was frozen to see
the face on the monitor.
- But this is
you! said Louis…
Mum-Psychologist
looked at me; her sorrow was so great that she couldn’t lie to me at that
moment.
- It’s your
twin sister…
They looked at
me; in their eyes there was more than sorrow, there was also guilt.
- Why? I
addressed the question to all of them; they looked at each other in silence; I
turned my back and hid into a closet to think.
None of their
excuses was enough to erase from my mind the thought that they had been
thinking only about themselves. We were meant to fill their bleak hours, to
care for them in their old age.
- Instead of
giving a brave end to your miserable life, you condemned me to become your
gravedigger, without for a moment thinking I would prefer to be lame and
paralyzed up on the surface instead of healthy here.
Their surprise
was genuine. Unfortunately for me, they hadn’t thought of this possibility. I
was stuck down here and Louis was born because of me.
Louis came to
my bed and told me “I am sorry about your sister”. I opened my arms and we
hugged tight. I had a sister over my
head and didn’t know it. I had a world, a life up there and I had lost it…
- Vesta, do
you promise me that you’ll never leave me?
He also felt
betrayed; all those lies had made us lose our confidence to the grown-ups. We
were insecure because we didn’t know whether their actions were for our good or
theirs.
-Do you want
us to get married?
He understood and immediately said “yes”. I
got up and pulled him by the hand.
- Like this?
In pyjamas?
- Dress is not
important, words are.
Hand in hand,
we walked to the “EXIT”. I let go of his hand to put both my hands on the door.
- What are you
doing? He asked uneasily, you haven’t got a suit…
- I am sure
this, TOO, is a lie.
I opened the
door and felt the light as a soft sheet upon me. For the first time in our
lives, our eyes met with natural light. We stood at the center of the area and
looked high up.
- Is that the
sky? Asked Louis surprised.
- Let’s go and
see…
I freed the
lever and we started going up among the plants. We reached the surface, we set
out feet on the ground, we looked at the earth and the sky and we got married.
- Louis, I
promise that I will love and take care of you for ever. I stopped short to
think and Louis repeated my words.
- Vesta, I
promise that I will love and take care of you for ever.
- Louis, I
will never betray you and I will be on your side as long as I live…
- Vesta, I
will never betray you and I will be on your side as long as… you live.
We exchanged a
tight handshake and sealed the occurrence.
Now that the
truth had been revealed, they could do all the improvements needed in
Oneiroupolis with calm. Our wells had water; we applied solar energy to the
masks so we could get rid of the generators and, for one more time, the Under
went out to the surface. We were a long way off from the area of the Above but,
to be sure they wouldn’t appear suddenly before us, me and Louis stayed behind
to watch them on the monitors. This is how we got to know and love them. They
were our “opium”; we held out thanks to them…
The
Environmentalist was the first to ‘go’
and the Chemist followed after some time. One by one, we buried them on the
surface. Only for Konstantin who, although order, had lived more than the rest,
I told Louis to keep him in Oneiroupolis. We built a space in our
“office” and buried him there. He had however completed his booth.
During his
last years, he did research on us. He‘d put cables all over us and give us
problems to solve. Others were asked to read texts about love and, since in
Oneiroupolis me and Louis were the only ones in love, he had us embrace and
kiss each other. Konstantin found the frequencies the brain emits at the
specific moment that one is arriving at a logical conclusion, as well as the
frequencies when one feels love. He built a booth and Mummy-Dentist was the
first to use it. Her waist was stiff after she had carried a cauldron in the
dining room. She walked in the booth bent in two and came out almost upright.
She was cured by the frequencies of love.
Konstantin
initiated me into his philosophy since he believed that a Woman who becomes a
mother finds herself nearer the Divine. I had given birth many times. I hadn’t
the strength to do what I had blamed them for years: give a brave end to our
misery. Deeply sympathetic to his last days, he found the suitable phrase to
say in order to soothe me.
-“Life dreams
of life…”
The Keyholder
sighed. She always loved to read Vesta’s story and there was a phrase of hers,
a phrase repeated twice, that left her particularly perplexed.
She turned the
pages; she had to continue with her report. For “Provisions” she wrote
“Satisfactory crop. Enough animals”. They had never eaten fish and seafood; centuries had passed since these species had gone extinct.
For “Installations” she wrote “Fine”. Of course there had been problems but
Citizen-Engineer was excellent and had given solutions, so there was no need to
mention them. For “Notes” she hesitated; she thought whether she should write
something but then she hastily penned only a dash.
Now that she was done with
Oneiroupolis, she had to write about the Above. She lay back on her chair and
looked at the three monitors. Her glance lingered on the one that hosted
permanently the “Past”. It was a tremendous collective work of the first years
of Oneiroupolis, by the people who had an experiential point of view about
their past. They had tried to collect and save the more they could on CD. The
musical background was classical music, songs of international success, voices
of people, animal cries and sounds of nature. The images contained pictures
they had transformed in 3-dimentional ones: buildings, works of art, paintings
and sculptures, animals, birds and fishes, rivers, lakes and oceans, historical
persons and events, images of everyday life. All came from movies and the
library. Themes changed every 2 or 3 seconds and they could remain stuck for days
on end to watch. The “Past” played permanently in the Dining Room, which was
also an area of distraction.
Her
eyes flew to the other monitors with the Above. She unconsciously looked for
her companion. She saw him next to a group of children, taking part in their
training. She had never liked this kind of arid reports about them. They didn’t
reveal, they didn’t say anything. For Oneiroupolis there wasn’t need for
anything more, but they were skimpy for the Above. Someone had to write in length
about them, about their life and their achievements.
She
felt something hovering in her heart; a craving came over her. She could do it,
it was she that could write about them, she who had a companion up there, that
wonderful man she had been told had been born on the same day as she.
Citizen-Psychologist had mentioned it, when she was but a child, and it had
been a decisive event for her life. She had begun to feel a personal interest
for that boy, and love him. Those feelings were the reason the previous
Keyholder had finally selected her. She had passed all the psychological tests
with an unprecedented success. She hadn’t the slightest scruple to destroy
Oneiroupolis if it meant that her favorite Above man would be saved.
“The
sense of economy has been inherent in Oneiroupolis and it has passed also in
our language. The first inhabitants were of different nationalities and talked
to the children in their mother tongues.
So, as years went by, there remained in our language the shortest phrases from
each tongue; for example the phrase “I don’t know” could have been saved in
English, German, French, but it remained in Italian, for brevity.
Language
is a basic tool with which humans express their disagreement and different
views. When they agree, a nod or a glance is enough; they don’t have to speak.
The Above never disagree, maybe that’s why their language is restricted to a
few brief words, gestures and signs. Such is their harmony, their bond, their
resemblance that one would think they are One Man, One Woman, One Child in
different ages.
Their gestures
and signs are clear and unambiguous, impossible to confuse. I admire them for
saying so few things… We don’t stop talking but I don’t know how much we are
feeling. What is the reason for saying “this hurts” if someone cannot feel
exactly what you experience? There should be a magical “feelings button”; when
you’d press it, the others could feel your words with the same intensity. The Above have invented this.
A typical day starts for them before sunrise. We don’t know exactly when; what we see, as soon as there is enough light, is that they have already woken up. They sit under the trees, resting their backs on the trunks, they keep their eyes closed and stay in this position without moving. What do they do? Meditation? Prayer? It certainly is some activity of the mind.
Then they go
to the creek and drink water. A lot of it, so much that they don’t need to eat
if not in the afternoon. The mothers in charge for the day, go to the caves to
relieve the previous ones and take care of children up to 4 years of age. They
have dug two more caves into the hill; we have optical contact only with the
first one but we assume
that the same happens in all of them.
The rest of
them, men and women, run. It’s amazing how they run! I remember a phrase I have
read, “like race horses”. They head to the sea; we don’t know what they do
there, but what our detectors show is that they cover about 60 kilometers in
one hour! I found some old Olympic Games records and found out there were many
who run 100 meters in 10 seconds. However, they wouldn’t have been able to run
the next 100 meters at the same speed.
The Above go to the sea, about 20 kilometers away, and return, sometimes
holding mussels, in about 40 minutes. They love motion and don’t run for
competition but in order for each one of them to improve his or herself.
After that
they go about their business. Those who have a turn at the plants get busy with
the cultivations, others with handicrafts and the rest are busy with the
training of the older children. Their training begins when they are able to run
steadily. It starts off with a simple game. They sit one opposite the other,
the grown up takes a pebble and shows it to the child, then puts his hands
behind his back, hides the pebble in one hand and brings the hands forward
again. The child tries to find the pebble. (14)Chances are 50% and it does not seem impressive. Soon,
however, the child gets to find the pebble 8 times out of ten. Then they make
the game more difficult by introducing a third possibility: that the pebble
stays on the ground, behind the grown-up’s back. Little by little, the child
becomes a good telepathic receiver. They start groping at the “button”.
They eat in the afternoon. Each
one chooses his or her food and gets it by him or herself. Sometimes they bake
bulbs but they usually eat raw food. They do not mix their food, they don’t try
to combine and make their food tastier; they understand that the more savory a
food is, the more one eats. They put salt even on the fruit and they eat
characteristically small quantities. Their lunchtime does not resemble at all
our ritual, our gatherings to eat and talk. Each one eats alone, as if shameful
for this need. Food to them is only a combustible.
After taking a short rest under
the trees, they assemble to play. It’s wonderful to see them compete. They form
groups according to sex and ability and each group provides a winner. Then the
winners compete until they arrive at the final winner. They play a different
game every day and they look like Titans trying to surpass themselves. One game
is reaching for the higher branch. They do astonishing jumps, in height as well
as in length. My companion is the best athlete in longjump. He can jump to the
opposite bank of the river, a distance of about 12 meters. In the river, they
also compete in swimming upstream. The most popular kind of race is running.
They run a specific distance in front of the caves; it’s 130 meters long and
some of them run it in 5 seconds.
The final winners, man and woman, are cheered and have
the honor to be the first to dance. The rest of them sit in the clearing in
front of the cave; it looks like they
are singing, like they all say “aaa”. The two winners
begin to swirl. One after the other, the rest of them stand up and take part in
the dance; in a while, the whole tribe is swirling. At this point our image is
lost. Every time they begin swirling, we get snow on our monitors and then
nothing. We can’t see anything and, when the image returns, their dance is
over.
Then they have another strange
game. They stand in a circle, according to their stature and someone stands in
the middle. He or she goes in front of everybody and gets spanked on the face
and body! There are biffs and punches. Then the next one goes in the center and
they go on until everyone is beaten up. Blows are not very strong, but they are
substantial and in the next day they all seem a little puffed up. The
Citizen-Psychologist says that they relieve their anger or that they don’t feel
anger thanks to this method."
The Keyholder re-read what she had
written and found it satisfactory. Now she had to describe their personal
moments and themselves. She wondered how she should begin and decided to start
with what one could primarily see when looking at them.
“The Above are giants. In their full
development, men are over two and a half meters high and there are many who
reach three meters. They have well developed muscles and dark skin. Men and
women have dark shiny hair that is left free and reaches up to their waste. Men
regularly scorch the hair on their cheeks with a burnt-out torch. It’s a
process done by one to the other in the creek; they go there in groups and,
when someone is burnt, he ducks his head in the water and the others laugh.
They are very handsome; everybody in
Oneiroupolis say they look so much alike that they can’t be told apart. Maybe
I’d say the same if I had not learnt to recognize first of all my companion.
This persistence was the reason I found out an astonishing fact. They almost
don’t grow old! We are over 40 but he
looks like my son. I have thousands of kilobytes in my archives, with images
and videos that prove he has the same appearance for the last twenty years.
Only his glance has changed. He looks around him more slowly, more sensually or
as if he is thinking more.
Children are especially fond of their
mothers, while these love all the children the same. This makes sense, because
a child has one mother while a mother has many children. Women bear children
over ten times. We have the exact number of births since they all give birth at
the creek. There is a pool with water. They throw in some hot stones so that
the water gets warm, suitable to welcome the new life; women sit in there and
give birth. After the delivery, and for as long as it is needed so that the
child is able to walk, they take care of it; then they get pregnant again.
They don’t use any special behavior for their own
children: they love, breastfeed and care for all in the same way. Children, on
the other hand, have a special caress for their mothers; they softly touch their belly
with their palms, as a recognition that they have come out of that specific
belly. When we were little children and my companion caressed his mother in
this way, there was also another woman who administered the same caress to her
although she herself had children older than us. I deduce that his mother today
is over 80, but she looks as young as I do and, only a few days ago, she was the
winner in her swimming team!
You cannot see an old person between the
Above. It’s as if their age ceased to grow around 40. They don’t get seriously
ill. If someone has a problem, it usually is over in 2 or 3 days. We haven’t
seen anyone dying.
Anchorites leave before dawn, leaving at
their favorite place two olive twigs. We can discern them making their way to
the animal area and we believe that they go there to die.
Their movements
are gracious and well aimed. They have
no problem when they are naked but their genitals are usually covered by the
ropes twisted around their hips. They
carry them to break branches with, to move around on their huge trees but they
also hang from them to do physical exercise. We don’t see them having sex, they
probably make love during the night. There are no rivalries; how could there be
rivalries when a man is with a woman but, when – say – he gets tired of her and
covets the woman of someone else, this woman is exactly the same as his. There
is no explanation as to how women have ended up being so alike. [16]”
Years ago, a
strange thing had happened to her. She was calm, laying on her bed in the
“capsule”. She suddenly felt her body tremble and, with wavy motions, slip out
of herself. She hovered to the ceiling and could see it a few centimeters above
her. As if her back was on an airy wave, she moved to the parlor. She saw a
bulge in a corner of the ceiling; she had the sensation of seeing everything
under her without moving her head. She hovered in this way for a while and flew
back into her body. She sat up startled and wondered what had happened to her.
She had read about Astral travel. Had anything similar happened to her? She
remembered the bulge on the ceiling and eagerly run to find it. Nothing was
there.
“It was a
dream”, she thought. But it had been so real!
After some time,
a similar thing occurred. She had the sensation of being asleep and at the same
time she could watch herself. Her body trembled outwards like a flame; she
could see her feet oscillate and a swirl pull her upwards, but her back and
head were pulling her back. She felt she could let go but was afraid to.
And then,
without any logical explanation, she adopted some characteristic features of
the Above. She ate little and raw food. When she was alone in her room, she
threw her clothes away and stayed naked. She often threw cold water on herself
and, at night, she ran. She put a sign on her door saying “DON’T DISTURB” and
did the unthinkable. She went up on the surface! As time went by she realized
she felt better. So one night she timed her running performance. Six months
later, timing herself again, she saw
her improvement and almost cried.
She summoned the Citizens and the
People and let them know about her experiment. She told them what they had to
do and that, from that day on, they also would go on the Surface every night.
They listened to her words almost delirious: it would be the first time in
their lives they could go out on the surface. It was an unprecedented event
that made them adore the Keyholder. In the last 3 years, Oneiroupolis ticked on
by copying as much as possible the life of the Above.
She heard someone knocking on the door. She put on her white robe, made up from a bed sheet and said: “Come in”
The 4th Psychologist came
in with an expression of concern all over her face.
- The 1st
Engineer is having a fit, she
said
and
left.
The
Keyholder hurried after her to the sanitarium; his screams could be heard
outside. When she walked in, he saw her. The long-time respect to the image of
the Keyholder had left a trace inside of him; her white tunic, a color only she
wore, was reminiscent of something that made him stop and flush his eyelids.
Then he started his woeful screams and spasmodic motions again.
The Keyholder nodded to the Citizen-Psychologist and she pulled a lever on the wall. A jet of
cold water made him crouch in a corner. The Psychologist stopped the beneficial
Water Shock and approached with her assistant to help the man.
Once again the
Keyholder thought that phrase Vesta had repeated and wondered when someone
would give a brave end to that misery. She went to Konstantin’s monument and
sat beside it on a chair. She closed her eyes and took a deep breath. That strange fragrance! How her soul felt soothed when she was there! She returned in the “capsule” and saw the snow on the
monitors.
What is
happening up there? She wondered once more.
In a while it
would get dark; she took the mask and glided towards the EXIT.
The stones that
absorbed solar energy lighted the place softly. She took a transformer,
connected it to the mask, raised a bright stone and came up to the surface. She
laid the stone on the ground, took off her clothes and looked at the stars in
exultation. It was cold, so she started running, enjoying the fact she was
alone.
She ran and kept
in mind her bright mark; she didn’t want to stray too far and lose their green
well. Then a thought rushed into her. To see where the snow came from.
Next evening she lay a mixture of beetroot
juice and iodine on her face and body. When her glaring white complexion that
might have betrayed her was concealed, she
fastened the transformer at the back of her
neck. She let her hair loose, threw it over her breasts and thought that, with
her stature, she looked like an Above girl in her teens. She summoned the 2nd
Keyholder, stood naked in front of her and let her know about her enterprise.
- Go, she said to her in admiration. She
trusted both her daring and her judgment. Whatever she would have done, would
surely be for their good, without any consequences on the Above.
As soon as it was dark, she took off
running for the river. She carried in her mind every detail of their ground,
she knew almost everything about their habits; she believed she would reach the
place before sunrise and that she would be able to hide.
She followed the river and discerned their familiar
hill under the starlight. She drank lots of water since she didn’t know when
she’d be able to drink again and, staying at a safe distance, went around the
hill reaching the most distant area of the forest; there she lay down between
the bushes and waited for the morning. Notwithstanding the cold she fell asleep
and, when she woke up, the sun was already high in the sky. She listened
carefully for some time and, hearing nothing, she raised her head with caution.
She chose an appropriate spot. She had a good view towards the area of their dance, in front of the cave, and could see their groups, far enough into the trees. Nearer to her she saw a handcraft team. Some grated pumpkins using pieces of wood and their hard nails. They took off the pith and let them dry so their skin would harden. Those utensils had many applications, they used them to carry water, make pickles or keep seeds and salt. Another group made cotton threads, which they used to make ropes for their various needs. With them they tied their ladders, which they needed to climb on the high trees, or they made swings and hammocks to enjoy in their leisure time, thick ropes they harnessed themselves with to ply the ground and, of course, the ropes around their waist.
What they needed to cut, they burned. They used controlled fire for cutting, and stones for smoothing. But the most useful tool they had, was their strength.
She wondered why these people had no curiosity.
They had never seen them wander away from their area, their whole world were
these few hundreds of meters in front of the cave and up to the sea. They
didn’t even go to the animal area if not at the end of their lives. Why didn’t
they want to know what lay beyond? Curiosity was a natural property of humans.
Why didn’t the Above have it?
Someone came out
of the trees and she immediately recognized her companion. She restrained her
impulsive move to run to him, hug him and kiss him. She looked at him avidly and realized the most natural thing,
that she was deeply in love with him. His stunting beauty was more intense now
and she wondered why the Above didn’t wear any adornments. In the archives, she
had seen ancient tribes wearing various materials upon them; why were they
different in this? The truth was no ornament would be proper for them.
They had their
incomparable beauty and grace but it was strange; they could have worn flowers
or strings of little stones but…
She realized
that, for them, the Earth was alive; they loved her and respected her! They
wouldn’t destroy a flower to put in their hair. They wouldn’t move a stone to
tie before their breast. A stone can be in a position of harmony with its
surroundings for millennia. What right had they to move it, if this wasn’t
necessary?
The man walked
towards the cave and he suddenly stopped. He took some hesitant steps in the
direction of the creek but then changed his mind and walked again to the
direction of the cave. His behavior seemed strange to her. He then walked
slowly towards the creek, then to the cave, stopped, put his hands on his waist
and turned around. Six boys came out of the trees and run to him laughing. They
grabbed him by the hands; three of them pulled him towards the cave and the
other three towards to creek.
She understood
their mischief at the same time as he, It was one of the telepathic games, with
children as emitters and grown ups as receivers. The children gave opposite
directions to confuse him and now they were amused for having made it. The man
chased them, grabbed one of them and the others threw themselves on him. Their
shouts and laughter caught the attention of the other groups but they weren’t
disturbed; it was nice chance for joyous contact. A crowd of little ones came out from various
directions and the human hill grew in height and sound. The Keyholder lowered
her head and cried. Never in her life had she felt sorry for the Under as much
as she did now. An end should be given to their misery.
That day’s game
was swimming; everybody went to the river and so she had the chance to stretch
her legs and take two of the oranges that had fallen on the ground; as she
quenched her thirst and hunger, she smiled at the thought of her love for her
companion.
Love was a
flower that seldom blossomed in Oneiroupolis. It didn’t matter to her that her
feelings could not be reciprocated, she didn’t even want it. She admired him so
much, she held him so high up that his existence touched deity; she didn’t want
him hers because that would mean bringing him down to her level. Who wants to
touch god? When you adore him, you find it impossible to desecrate him.
Immersed in her
thoughts, she was startled to hear their song. She sat up and looked. The winners had begun swirling. As the
minutes passed, more and more people entered the dance, the sound became softer
and she felt more and more strange. She realized her hair was standing on end!
She felt static electricity even on her eyelashes.
No sound reached
her ears. The tribe was swirling…
Nature seemed to
wait…
She suddenly saw
sparkles over their heads…
The sparkles
became flames dancing wildly and uniting between them….
The flames
became fires that covered their area…
The fires became
a river of lighting flowing towards the area of the animals…
The river
returned as an ocean and shone as far as her eyes could see.
Then it all
stopped and she began to cry and cry and cry…
She could not
understand how it had come about. She was sure she had flown over the trees.
She couldn’t describe what she had felt. Serenity, tenderness, safety,
completeness, love, submission, greatness, happiness…. She couldn’t imagine
there were organs inside her that could have stood THIS. How could she go back
to caring about her everyday life after THIS? She could be sure about one thing
alone. She wanted to relive it.
As she watched them walk away a question came to
her mind.
Why were men so many and women so few?
Through closed eyes she read the Book entries for
the first time.
The 3rd Keyholder, at the end of the
first century, had recorded the largest population. About 200.000 people.
The 9th Keyholder, at the end of the 2nd century, had recorded a total of 80.000.
The 16th Keyholder, at the end of the 3rd
century, had recorded a total of 16.000.
Herself, as the 22nd Keyholder, had
reported a little while ago the total for the 4th century. Less than
4.000 people. From the time she had undertaken her duties up to now, that is in
the last 9 years, 373 boys had been born but only 30 girls. The human species
tended to become extinct. While women gave birth many times, they bore less and
less girls. Why was that happening. It looked as if Nature didn’t want them.
When it got dark, she left for the area of the animals; she had to see what was there. She often stopped for water. Her pace was losing vigor, she felt more and more tired but she went on…
She normally should have returned this morning but
she would be gone one more day. In Oneiroupolis they’d worry, but she had no means
to let them know; she couldn’t do differently, she had to follow the course of
the lighting river.
Then she froze, startled. She could not swim, how
would she cross the river?
She immediately dropped any thought of turning back. She would go on. She would
see whatever she could see and understand whatever she could understand.
She enjoyed the
colors of the sunrise for the first time in her life and found out that she was
walking on a path, a trail formed by the feet of the Anchorites over centuries.
This made her all the more enthusiastic and she went on with renewed strength.
At a certain
point the path ended. She realized it was from there that she should cross to
the other bank. The river bed was shallow where she stood and she put her foot
into the water. It was frozen; she kept going until the water reached her waist
and she stooped to rub her frozen feet at the same time groping for spots she
could thread on. When she straightened her body, she realized the color had
washed off her and saw three people on the opposite bank of the river. They
were two men and one woman, whom she recognized. She was the grandmother of her companion.
They showed no surprise, no fear, although it was
impossible they hadn’t realized she didn’t belong to their tribe. Her
complexion alone was enough…
The woman pointed at the two men and beckoned her
to come.
It was inconceivable, but she thought that these
people were expecting her.
She took two more steps and the water reached her chest. She felt her legs
tied by fear and looked at them. The two men entered the water and approached
her. They grabbed her by the arms and carried her to the other side. The water
reached their necks; it would have drowned her.
With them at her flanks, they walked up the hill.
They stood there and she heard hundreds of people applauding. These people had
been waiting for her! They were under their trees, looking at her with smiles
upon their faces; some approached and touched her lovingly. Then, they left her
alone.
How was it possible that they had been waiting? How
was it possible that they knew about the Undersurface people?
What a wonderful place for anyone to die! She thought. How much harmony among the animals, among the people, in nature… The only thing breaking the harmony was that trunk on a nearby hill, sticking out and dominating the landscape, a trunk the Above sometimes turned to look at. It was unnatural, arid among the green feast of nature, but it sure meant something to them.
She walked between them and yet no-one stared at
her with curiosity. She could see love, compassion and acceptance on their
wrinkled faces. Most of them kept their eyes closed and they were old, so very
old that you could wonder how they still lived, what power kept them still
alive…
“The slapping”!
In her mind there shone the answer to a question she had had for years. “Why do
they keep young?”
It was not
natural for age not to be seen on their faces. The Keyholder suspected that it
might have something to do with the increased carbon dioxide. However the aged
faces of the people in the animals’ area were the proof that the reason lay
elsewhere.
Physical
exercise keeps the body in shape, and Surface people exercised a lot. But how
could their face, too, stay young? As time goes by, muscles lose their tone and
vigor, the face shrinks, becomes thinner, wrinkles appear. She saw this process
on the aged faces in Oneiroupolis, she had started to notice it on her face
too, but not on the Above. Why? Because of their slapping! They used
this game so as to exercise their faces, too. Micro-injuries forced their
muscles to heal and the whole process kept them strong. They repeated this
process every four days, so their muscles could not lose their tone and sag.
Once again she
fest admiration for them and she promised herself that, from now on,
Oneiroupolis would copy them in this matter, too. The results would be
beneficial to all ages, as exercise is beneficial no matter when you start it.
She sat under an
orange tree, laid her back on the trunk, closed her eyes and fell asleep with a
last thought in her mind: “What a wonderful place to live in!”
She woke up with
a sense of expectation and felt the electricity on her body. Everybody had
gathered around the trunk, sitting on the ground with eyes shut. Sparkles appeared,
clustering over the old wood; then they became a fire and received the river of
lightning. And when the fire became a protective umbrella covering the whole
earth, a word entered her mind, a clear message she got from that trunk. “Come”.
She believed there was no bigger
happiness than the happiness of giving; she loved humans so much! She wished
she could embrace each one that ever walked on earth, tell them a nice word and
kiss them! She didn’t know Hell, but she knew what hell was for her: wanting so
much to help and not being able to.
She felt so lucky for everything she had
been able to see, to hear and read. And she was sorry that the Above couldn’t
know the achievements of their ancestors. She wished there were a way to make
them see the “Past”…. But had
it not always been this way?
How lucky were those who built, saw and
walked in the Parthenon! But how much was missed by those who didn’t see the?
Dom! (
Translator’s note: Roman Catholic cathedral
in Cologne) How many were those enraptured
by the 9th Symphony! But they were so unlucky for not being there in
time to feel ecstatic with Mythodea! How rightly proud the generation of the
wheel would have been! But might they have seen the moon-landing! How many had
the happiness to have heard Pythagoras but might they have heard Jesus!
She felt in pain for people and thought
it was a glaring injustice. There should be archives with every fact,
everything should be registered somewhere and people should be able to access
it. “Enter” and experience it. This was right and therefore should be possible.
She immediately realized her mistake. An
inventor constructs something that doesn’t exist in nature. He has the
responsibility to ask himself whether this will benefit men. Might it be
harmful to nature? Even if he believes this invention of his is useful, how can
he be sure that in the future it won’t be used for evil? He cannot know and so
he cannot go ahead. He must contrast his cleverness, let his logic prevail. He
wouldn’t have made anything, be it missile for space, arrow, wheel, nor plow.
Man should have had the logic to not let his intelligence guide him.
The Surface people had not constructed
anything new. They used pumpkins for bowls and the cotton for their ropes,
natural materials in a slightly different form. They had made the Right their
way of life. They lived loving and offering to one another. The absence of fear
and stress had changed the chemistry of their brains, their perception had
expanded, their thought covered the space. It was thanks to THIS that she saw all these things.
For a few seconds she had felt partaking
in a sphere where people, animals, plants, water, mountains, all Earth was one.
A tightly united ONE. She flew to the trees and let herself, confident. She
traveled with them and saw the day alternate with the night, alternate with
day…
She felt the need to see beyond… She was
attacked by satyrs and dragons, chased by chained naked women and children… she
cried for help and there appeared by her side someone she recognized…
“Alexander”
“Come and see”
She saw a Black cloud and felt its
Coldness. “It is the Cold and Nothing”
She approached; she couldn’t see clearly
inside of it but she discerned twin serpents rotating in opposite directions.
Some escaped their twins and came out of
the cloud.
“It is the motion and Something”
They united between them and formed a perfectly round diamond.
“It is Matter”
The diamonds were drawn together forming
magnificent triangles.
“It is what has become, Harmony”
The triangles
became more and more numerous and she saw the Universes.
“It is Creation”
“Why do they
have different colors?”
“Because they
have different life times”
“Every two of
them have the same color”
“It’s because
they come from the same, but opposite, motion”
“Let’s move to
ours”
They moved across the Galaxies and she saw Earth. There, she felt secure and Alexander disappeared. She dove into the atmosphere and, as she approached the animal area, she saw him looking at her and inviting them. “Come”.
She was approaching Oneiroupolis
and felt tired but relieved, happy and sad for what she was about to do. She
discerned someone near their well; it was getting dark and she could not see
who it was. She was away three days, everybody would be concerned. The ground
started sloping and she lost him.
She had thought with every detail
what would follow but now that she was reaching Oneiroupolis she needed some
more minutes alone before the great change.
She sat on the
ground and rubbed her feet. She admired her soles which in the last three years
had become nearly as resistant as those of the Αbove. In this narrow visual field, there came two
more feet. Two feet thrice as large as hers. The feet of a giant! Her glance
rose slowly, her heart beating fast. She saw his face and started to cry. Her god! Her
companion stood there in front of her and smiled. He knelt and looked deep into her soul. He reached out with his hand and softly brushed her tears away. Then he tenderly took her in
his arms.
How can everything be told with one glance!
How can Love be complete in one embrace!
How can the taste of life be enclosed in one
kiss!
He got up. The Keyholder imitated him. She needed to stop looking at his eyes to be
able to go. Her eyes glided down on his lips, on the dip of his neck, lined up with
his navel, passed by his ropes and looked at his feet. She closed her eyes and,
when she opened them again, he was not there. She saw him running and
understood he knew about her, they knew about them. They “captured” their thoughts.
They planted
all the plants and freed the animals. She thought her phrase over five times
and Oneiroupolis was sealed for ever. She took some soil, threw it on the steel door and the others did likewise. In a while
the wind would finish their job and nothing could be seen.
An end had
been given to their misery.
They carried
with them only their masks and the transformers, nothing else.
The Above were
not threatened by anything. They weren’t afraid of anything.
The Above had
attained the unattainable. They lived right.
She had gone
where few had been. She had seen things only a few had seen. She had seen
Nothing, that which people say existed before God.
She understood
why there were so few girls born.
She understood
why they had been summoned up.
She understood.
There was no
question in her mind. Nothing waited for an answer. The Universe became small.
A dot inside her. She wasn’t sad, she wasn’t glad, she only sighed.
She placed
herself ahead of them and thought that she was leading them to Paradise.
The lightning
that sheared the sky lighted the sun. A black cloud appeared from nowhere,
there, over the area of the animals. The wind and the clamor reached over to them.
-What’s happening? Asked the
Citizen-Psychologist.
The Keyholder
smiled and it was this smile that made them cluster around her, scared.
-It is the
final temptation, the beast is fighting for his life with threats. Don’t be
afraid, be glad, because today is humanity’s most glorious day.
He wας not needed here
anymore. The man-tree, the one who changed name three times in his life,
disappeared.
THE END
To Alexander
BIBLIOGRAPHY –
COMMENTS
1. Thirteen
hundredths of second is the time in which a beam of light would travel along
the perimeter of the Earth.
2. Konstantin
Buteyko. (1923-2003) His method for the prevention and cure of many diseases
was officially recognized by the Soviet Union.
Maybe no capitalistic state would have permited the dissemination of a method
which cures without drugs, that is without cost.
3. Dr Masaru
Emoto: “Messages from Water”
4. Ιvanov Porfiry. He was born in Russia, in 1898. When
he was told he had cancer, he decided to die, so he went out naked and walked
in the mountain. He felt better, so the following day he did the same. Since
then, he lived naked in the snow. He was considered a saint and Gorbachev
himself went to see him.
5. Alfred Rupert Sheldrake. (Born 1942)
Rupert Sheldrake is a British biologist who has managed
to “shake” the placid waters of modern biology and other scientific fields.
Morphic fields
Sheldrake generalizes
the notion of “morphic fields”,
proposing, the existence of a new, for contemporary science, kind of fields
which are responsible not only for defining the form but also behavior.
Therefore, these fields organize every system as far as both the form
and its function is concerned. Every system disposes of such a field which
unites and coordinates its various parts so that it acts and behaves as a
whole. Thus, a system is no more the simple sum of its parts but something
more, which brings another integrated entity into life.
6. Galina
Shatalova (1916-2011) was a neurosurgeon. She was the head of the medicine
committee which selected Soviet Cosmonauts. In 1990, to prove a theory she had
developed, she undertook a 311 miles (500 Km) hike in the desert, together with
a team of patients, eating only seeds. She had also collaborated with Butyeko.
7. “What the Bleep Do We Know!?”, a 2004 film conceived and funded by William Arntz, who co-directed the film along with Betsy Chasse and Mark Vicente.
8. “Love has
an expiration date, Italian scientists assert in a new research. Passion lasts
two years at most. Researchers of Pisa
University have studied
the hormone levels in men and women who were at the beginning of a
relationship. At the beginning of a relationship couples are elated having high
levels of specific hormones which kindle the fire of passion. Two years later,
when couples usually pass to the phase of a stable relationship, other
hormones, which transform the sexual desire to a need for a simple embrace,
take over”. Newspaper TO VIMA
9. Dr. Walter
Hartenbach: Die Cholesterin-Lüge – das
Märchen vom bösen Cholesterin. Verlag Herbig, 2002
10. E. Tsiringakis: The horrible experiment
of vaccines. “Trito Mati” magazine
11. “The milk
conspiracy” . “Trito Mati” magazine, 126/2004
12. “Lack of
Salt – Cause of Many Serious Diseases”, www.shirleys-wellness-cafe.com.
13. “ The
criminal complaint to Le Hague International Court of Justice about Genocide
and other crimes against humanity of the Drug Companies”. Protagoras, “Trito
Mati” magazine.
14. 15 In the
1996 French film “La Belle
Verte”, written and directed by Coline
Serreau, there is the same description. Either a simple coincidence, or we
have dawned on us (15) to the same question with the same idea – solution!
Translator S.F




